Repository logo
 

Population Genomic Structure of Eurasian and African Foxtail Millet (Setaria italica) Landrace Accessions Inferred from Genotyping-by-sequencing (GbS) Supports a Single Domestic Origin and Identifies Four Environmentally-Adapted Groups

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

No Thumbnail Available

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Przelomska, Natalia 
Campana, Michael 
Cockram, James 
Bligh, Frances 

Abstract

Foxtail millet (Setaria italica) is the second most important millet species globally, adapted to cultivation in diverse environments. Like its wild progenitor, green foxtail (S. viridis), it is a model species for C4 photosynthetic pathways and stress tolerance genes in related bioenergy crops.

We addressed questions regarding the evolution and spread of foxtail millet through a population genomic study of landraces from across its cultivated range in Europe, Asia and Africa. We sought to determine population genomic structure and the relationship of domesticated lineages relative to wild S. viridis. Further, we aimed to identify genes involved in environmental stress tolerance, that have undergone differential selection between geographical and genetic groups.

328 S. italica landrace accessions and 12 S. viridis accessions were sequenced by genotyping-by-sequencing (GbS). After filtering, 5677 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were retained for the combined S. italica/S. viridis dataset, and 5020 SNPs for the S. italica dataset. We extended geographic coverage of S. viridis by including previously published GbS sequence tags, yielding an 825-SNP dataset for phylogenetic reconstruction.

All S. italica samples were monophyletic relative to S. viridis, suggesting a single origin of foxtail millet, although no group of S. italica was clearly the most ancestral. Four genetic clusters were found within S. italica, with distinctive geographical distributions. These results, together with archaeobotanical evidence, suggest plausible routes of spread of foxtail millet. Selection scans identified nine candidate genes in comparisons between clusters potentially involved in environmental adaptations, particularly to novel climates encountered as domesticated foxtail millet spread to new altitudes and latitudes.

Description

Keywords

Journal Title

The Plant Genome

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1940-3372

Volume Title

Publisher

Crop Science Society of America

Publisher DOI

Publisher URL

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
European Research Council (249642)
Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2017-196)
European Research Council Advanced Investigator award (ref. 249642, “Food Globalisation in Prehistory” by Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grants (refs. F/09717/C, “Pioneers of Pan-Asian Contact” and RPG-2017-196, “Crops, Pollinators and People”) BBSRC-CASE studentship with co-funding from Unilever The Smithsonian Institution Royal Society International Joint Projects grant (ref. JP101321)