A haplotype-based evolutionary history of barley domestication
Abstract
Barley is an old crop with a complex history. Its evolution and the molecular basis of domestication have been intensely studied. This research has ruled out a single origin of the crop and motivated a model of mosaic genomics ancestry. As more and better genome sequences have become available, this concept can be refined: where do the building blocks of the mosaic, that is, the haplotypes come from? Were all cultivated barleys created equal or did some wild barley populations contribute more to some domesticated lineages? To answer these and other questions, we pursue a haplotype-based approach to connect diversity and population structure in wild and domesticated barley. We sequence the genomes of 628 genebank accessions and 23 archaeological specimens. Using these data, we infer the spatiotemporal origins of haplotypes and map the contributions of different wild barley populations either during the initial phase of domestication or through later gene flow. Ancient DNA sequences corroborate our genome-wide analysis in present-day samples. Our results indicate that an early domesticated founder population formed in the Fertile Crescent during an extended period of pre-domestication cultivation. A practical implication of our findings is that the high haplotype differentiation between barley populations, which arose possibly without, and most likely on top of, selective forces, complicates the mapping of adaptive loci.
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