TY - JOUR
T1 - A bountiful harvest
T2 - Genomic insights into crop domestication phenotypes
AU - Olsen, Kenneth M.
AU - Wendel, Jonathan F.
PY - 2013/4
Y1 - 2013/4
N2 - Human selection during crop domestication has resulted in remarkable transformations of plant phenotypes, providing a window into the genetic basis of morphological evolution. Recent progress in our understanding of the genetic architecture of novel plant traits has emerged from combining advanced molecular technologies with improved experimental designs, including nested association mapping, genome-wide association studies, population genetic screens for signatures of selection, and candidate gene approaches. These studies reveal a diversity of underlying causative mutations affecting phenotypes important in plant domestication and crop improvement, including coding sequence substitutions, presence/absence and copy number variation, transposon activation leading to novel gene structures and expression patterns, diversification following gene duplication, and polyploidy leading to altered combinatorial capabilities. The genomic regions unknowingly targeted by human selection include both structural and regulatory genes, often with results that propagate through the transcriptome as well as to other levels in the biosynthetic and morphogenetic networks. ©
AB - Human selection during crop domestication has resulted in remarkable transformations of plant phenotypes, providing a window into the genetic basis of morphological evolution. Recent progress in our understanding of the genetic architecture of novel plant traits has emerged from combining advanced molecular technologies with improved experimental designs, including nested association mapping, genome-wide association studies, population genetic screens for signatures of selection, and candidate gene approaches. These studies reveal a diversity of underlying causative mutations affecting phenotypes important in plant domestication and crop improvement, including coding sequence substitutions, presence/absence and copy number variation, transposon activation leading to novel gene structures and expression patterns, diversification following gene duplication, and polyploidy leading to altered combinatorial capabilities. The genomic regions unknowingly targeted by human selection include both structural and regulatory genes, often with results that propagate through the transcriptome as well as to other levels in the biosynthetic and morphogenetic networks. ©
KW - Association mapping
KW - Crop improvement
KW - Evo-devo
KW - Evolutionary genomics
KW - Human-mediated selection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84877677216&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1146/annurev-arplant-050312-120048
DO - 10.1146/annurev-arplant-050312-120048
M3 - Review article
C2 - 23451788
AN - SCOPUS:84877677216
SN - 1543-5008
VL - 64
SP - 47
EP - 70
JO - Annual Review of Plant Biology
JF - Annual Review of Plant Biology
ER -