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Evolution of recombination landscapes in diverging populations of bread wheat
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Abstract
Reciprocal exchanges of DNA (crossovers) that occur during meiosis are mandatory to ensure the production of fertile gametes in sexually reproducing species. They also contribute to shuffle parental alleles into new combinations thereby fuelling genetic variation and evolution. However, due to biological constraints, the recombination landscape is highly heterogenous along the genome which limits the range of allelic combinations and the adaptability of populations. An approach to better understand the constraints on the recombination process is to study how it evolved in the past. In this work we tackled this question by constructing recombination profiles in four diverging bread wheat (
Triticum aestivum L
.) populations established from 371 landraces genotyped at 200,062 SNPs. We used linkage disequilibrium (LD) patterns to estimate in each population the past distribution of recombination along the genome and characterize its fine-scale heterogeneity. At the megabase scale, recombination rates derived from LD patterns were consistent with family-based estimates obtained from a population of 406 recombinant inbred lines. Among the four populations, recombination landscapes were significantly positively correlated between each other and shared a statistically significant proportion of highly recombinant intervals. However, this comparison also highlighted that the similarity in recombination landscapes between populations was significantly decreasing with their genetic differentiation in most regions of the genome. This observation was found to be robust to SNP ascertainment and demography and suggests a relatively rapid evolution of factors determining the fine-scale localization of recombination in bread wheat.
Title: Evolution of recombination landscapes in diverging populations of bread wheat
Description:
Abstract
Reciprocal exchanges of DNA (crossovers) that occur during meiosis are mandatory to ensure the production of fertile gametes in sexually reproducing species.
They also contribute to shuffle parental alleles into new combinations thereby fuelling genetic variation and evolution.
However, due to biological constraints, the recombination landscape is highly heterogenous along the genome which limits the range of allelic combinations and the adaptability of populations.
An approach to better understand the constraints on the recombination process is to study how it evolved in the past.
In this work we tackled this question by constructing recombination profiles in four diverging bread wheat (
Triticum aestivum L
.
) populations established from 371 landraces genotyped at 200,062 SNPs.
We used linkage disequilibrium (LD) patterns to estimate in each population the past distribution of recombination along the genome and characterize its fine-scale heterogeneity.
At the megabase scale, recombination rates derived from LD patterns were consistent with family-based estimates obtained from a population of 406 recombinant inbred lines.
Among the four populations, recombination landscapes were significantly positively correlated between each other and shared a statistically significant proportion of highly recombinant intervals.
However, this comparison also highlighted that the similarity in recombination landscapes between populations was significantly decreasing with their genetic differentiation in most regions of the genome.
This observation was found to be robust to SNP ascertainment and demography and suggests a relatively rapid evolution of factors determining the fine-scale localization of recombination in bread wheat.
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