Subgenome parallel selection is associated with morphotype diversification and convergent crop domestication in Brassica rapa and Brassica oleracea.
Feng ChengRifei SunXilin HouHongkun ZhengFenglan ZhangYangyong ZhangBo LiuJianli LiangMu ZhuangYunxia LiuDongyuan LiuXiaobo WangPingxia LiYumei LiuKe LinJohan BucherNingwen ZhangYan WangHui WangJie DengYongcui LiaoKeyun WeiXueming ZhangLixia FuYunyan HuJisheng LiuChengcheng CaiShujiang ZhangShifan ZhangFei LiHui ZhangJifang ZhangNing GuoZhiyuan LiuJin LiuChao SunYuan MaHaijiao ZhangYang CuiMicheal R FreelingTheo BormGuusje BonnemaJian WuXiaowu WangPublished in: Nature genetics (2016)
Brassica species, including crops such as cabbage, turnip and oilseed, display enormous phenotypic variation. Brassica genomes have all undergone a whole-genome triplication (WGT) event with unknown effects on phenotype diversification. We resequenced 199 Brassica rapa and 119 Brassica oleracea accessions representing various morphotypes and identified signals of selection at the mesohexaploid subgenome level. For cabbage morphotypes with their typical leaf-heading trait, we identified four subgenome loci that show signs of parallel selection among subgenomes within B. rapa, as well as four such loci within B. oleracea. Fifteen subgenome loci are under selection and are shared by these two species. We also detected strong subgenome parallel selection linked to the domestication of the tuberous morphotypes, turnip (B. rapa) and kohlrabi (B. oleracea). Overall, we demonstrated that the mesohexaploidization of the two Brassica genomes contributed to their diversification into heading and tuber-forming morphotypes through convergent subgenome parallel selection of paralogous genes.