Microsatellites are important tools for plant breeding, genetics, and evolution, but few studies have analyzed their mutation pattern in plants. In this study, we estimated the mutation rate for 142 microsatellite loci in maize (Zea mays subsp. mays) in two different experiments of mutation accumulation. The mutation rate per generation was estimated to be 7.7 x 10(-4) for microsatellites with dinucleotide repeat motifs, with a 95% confidence interval from 5.2 x 10(-4) to 1.1 x 10(-3). For microsatellites with repeat motifs of more than 2 bp in length, no mutations were detected; so we could only estimate the upper 95% confidence limit of 5.1 x 10(-5) for the mutation rate. For dinucleotide repeat microsatellites, we also determined that the variance of change in the number of repeats (sigma(m)2) is 3.2. We sequenced 55 of the 73 observed mutations, and all mutations proved to be changes in the number of repeats in the microsatellite or in mononucleotide tracts flanking the microsatellite. There is a higher probability to mutate to an allele of larger size. There is heterogeneity in the mutation rate among dinucleotide microsatellites and a positive correlation between the number of repeats in the progenitor allele and the mutation rate. The microsatellite-based estimate of the effective population size of maize is more than an order of magnitude less than previously reported values based on nucleotide sequence variation.
How domestication bottlenecks and artificial selection shaped the amount and distribution of genetic variation in the genomes of modern crops is poorly understood. We analyzed diversity at 462 simple sequence repeats (SSRs) or microsatellites spread throughout the maize genome and compared the diversity observed at these SSRs in maize to that observed in its wild progenitor, teosinte. The results reveal a modest genomewide deficit of diversity in maize relative to teosinte. The relative deficit of diversity is less for SSRs with dinucleotide repeat motifs than for SSRs with repeat motifs of more than two nucleotides, suggesting that the former with their higher mutation rate have partially recovered from the domestication bottleneck. We analyzed the relationship between SSR diversity and proximity to QTL for domestication traits and observed no relationship between these factors. However, we did observe a weak, although significant, spatial correlation for diversity statistics among SSRs within 2 cM of one another, suggesting that SSR diversity is weakly patterned across the genome. Twenty-four of 462 SSRs (5%) show some evidence of positive selection in maize under multiple tests. Overall, the pattern of genetic diversity at maize SSRs can be explained largely by a bottleneck effect with a smaller effect from selection. B ETWEEN 5000 and 10,000 years ago, humans dotion, and artificially high diversity at genes under diversifying selection. mesticated virtually all major crop species used by modern agricultural societies (Smith 2001). This feat These two processes-selection targeted on agronomic genes and drift due to the domestication bottleneck was accomplished through artificial selection for traits that improved agronomic qualities. As a result of this affecting the entire genome-are the principal factors that influence the amount and distribution of genetic process, favorable alleles at loci controlling agronomic traits were brought to fixation in the population during variation in crop genomes as compared to their wild the domestication period. After the initial domesticaprogenitors. Studies on isozymes and gene sequences tion, the continued practice of selective breeding alrevealed a general reduction of genetic variation in lowed additional favorable alleles to sweep through the crops as a result of the domestication bottleneck (Doecrop species, while diversifying selection in response bley et al. 1984; Eyre-Walker et al. 1998; Hilton and to the different environments encountered during the Gaut 1998); however, these exploratory studies ingeographic expansion of the crop caused regional fixavolved relatively few loci and thus the generality of their tion of distinct favorable alleles. As a consequence of results needs confirmation. Our knowledge of the imthis complex history of selection, only a limited portion pact of selection on diversity in crops is more restricted of the population contributed to each subsequent gensince very few agronomic genes have been identified and eration. Some anticip...
BackgroundMaize breeding germplasm used in Southwest China has high complexity because of the diverse ecological features of this area. In this study, the population structure, genetic diversity, and linkage disequilibrium decay distance of 362 important inbred lines collected from the breeding program of Southwest China were characterized using the MaizeSNP50 BeadChip with 56,110 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).ResultsWith respect to population structure, two (Tropical and Temperate), three (Tropical, Stiff Stalk and non-Stiff Stalk), four [Tropical, group A germplasm derived from modern U.S. hybrids (PA), group B germplasm derived from modern U.S. hybrids (PB) and Reid] and six (Tropical, PB, Reid, Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic, PA and North) subgroups were identified. With increasing K value, the Temperate group showed pronounced hierarchical structure with division into further subgroups. The Genetic Diversity of each group was also estimated, and the Tropical group was more diverse than the Temperate group. Seven low-genetic-diversity and one high-genetic-diversity regions were collectively identified in the Temperate, Tropical groups, and the entire panel. SNPs with significant variation in allele frequency between the Tropical and Temperate groups were also evaluated. Among them, a region located at 130 Mb on Chromosome 2 showed the highest genetic diversity, including both number of SNPs with significant variation and the ratio of significant SNPs to total SNPs. Linkage disequilibrium decay distance in the Temperate group was greater (2.5–3 Mb) than that in the entire panel (0.5–0.75 Mb) and the Tropical group (0.25–0.5 Mb). A large region at 30–120 Mb of Chromosome 7 was concluded to be a region conserved during the breeding process by comparison between S37, which was considered a representative tropical line in Southwest China, and its 30 most similar derived lines.ConclusionsFor the panel covered most of widely used inbred lines in Southwest China, this work representatively not only illustrates the foundation and evolution trend of maize breeding resource as a theoretical reference for the improvement of heterosis, but also provides plenty of information for genetic researches such as genome-wide association study and marker-assisted selection in the future.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-3041-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
tassel-less1 (tls1) is a classical maize (Zea mays) inflorescence mutant. Homozygous mutant plants have no tassels or very small tassels, and ear development is also impaired. Using a positional cloning approach, ZmNIP3;1 (a NOD26-like intrinsic protein) was identified as the candidate gene for tls1. The ZmNIP3;1 gene is completely deleted in the tls1 mutant genome. Two Mutator-insertional TUSC alleles of ZmNIP3;1 exhibited tls1-like phenotypes, and allelism tests confirmed that the tls1 gene encodes ZmNIP3;1. Transgenic plants with an RNA interference (RNAi) construct to down-regulate ZmNIP3;1 also showed tls1-like phenotypes, further demonstrating that TLS1 is ZmNIP3;1. Sequence analysis suggests that ZmNIP3;1 is a boron channel protein. Foliar application of boron could rescue the tls1 phenotypes and restore the normal tassel and ear development. Gene expression analysis indicated that in comparison with that of the wild type or tls1 plants treated with boron, the transition from the vegetative to reproductive phase or the development of the floral meristem is impaired in the shoot apical meristem of the tls1 mutant plants. It is concluded that the tls1 mutant phenotypes are caused by impaired boron transport, and boron is essential for inflorescence development in maize.
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