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      Whole-genome duplication as a key factor in crop domestication.

      1 , 1 , 1
      Nature plants
      Springer Nature

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          Abstract

          Polyploidy is commonly thought to be associated with the domestication process because of its concurrence with agriculturally favourable traits and because it is widespread among the major plant crops(1-4). Furthermore, the genetic consequences of polyploidy(5-7) might have increased the adaptive plasticity of those plants, enabling successful domestication(6-8). Nevertheless, a detailed phylogenetic analysis regarding the association of polyploidy with the domestication process, and the temporal order of these distinct events, has been lacking(3). Here, we have gathered a comprehensive data set including dozens of genera, each containing one or more major crop species and for which sufficient sequence and chromosome number data exist. Using probabilistic inference of ploidy levels conducted within a phylogenetic framework, we have examined the incidence of polyploidization events within each genus. We found that domesticated plants have gone through more polyploidy events than their wild relatives, with monocots exhibiting the most profound difference: 54% of the crops are polyploids versus 40% of the wild species. We then examined whether the preponderance of polyploidy among crop species is the result of two, non-mutually-exclusive hypotheses: (1) polyploidy followed by domestication, and (2) domestication followed by polyploidy. We found support for the first hypothesis, whereby polyploid species were more likely to be domesticated than their wild relatives, suggesting that the genetic consequences of polyploidy have conferred genetic preconditions for successful domestication on many of these plants.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Plants
          Nature plants
          Springer Nature
          2055-0278
          2055-0278
          Aug 01 2016
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Molecular Biology and Ecology of Plants, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
          Article
          nplants2016115
          10.1038/nplants.2016.115
          27479829
          2325a0b5-6544-4d79-9ad2-05eb46769f87
          History

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