4.7 Article

Hybrid-derived weedy rice maintains adaptive combinations of alleles associated with seed dormancy

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 24, Pages 6556-6569

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16709

Keywords

adaptive introgression; genome stabilization; hybridization; seed dormancy; weedy rice

Funding

  1. Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research Council
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [22K05665]
  3. National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
  4. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries
  5. Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution

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Hybridization between weedy and cultivated rice can stabilize and transmit adaptive traits, such as seed dormancy. This study found that hybrid-derived weedy rice strains maintained adaptive allele combinations for seed dormancy, despite equal representation of parental weedy and cultivated rice in the genome. The hybrid-derived strains were more dormant than the parental weedy rice strains.
Plant hybridization is a pathway for the evolution of adaptive traits. However, hybridization between adapted and nonadapted populations may affect the persistence of combinations of adaptive alleles evolved through natural selection. Seed dormancy is an adaptive trait for weedy rice because it regulates the timing of seed germination and the persistence of the soil seed bank. Hybridization between weedy and cultivated rice has been confirmed with an adaptive introgression of deep seed dormancy alleles from cultivated rice. Here, we explored the influence of hybridization on the conservation of adaptive allele combinations by evaluating natural variation and genetic structure in seed dormancy-associated genomic regions. Based on sequence variation in the genomic regions associated with seed dormancy, hybrid-derived weedy rice strains maintained most of the adaptive combinations for this trait observed in the parental weedy rice, despite equal representation of the parental weedy and cultivated rice in the whole genome sequence. Moreover, hybrid-derived weedy rice strains were more dormant than their parental weedy rice strains, and this trait was strongly influenced by the environment. This study suggests that hybridization between weedy rice (adaptive allelic combinations for seed dormancy) and cultivated rice (nonadaptive combinations) generates weedy rice strains expressing deep seed dormancy caused by genome stabilization through the removal of alleles derived from cultivated rice, in addition to the adaptive introgression of deep seed dormancy alleles derived from cultivated rice. Thus, hybridization between adapted and nonadapted populations appears to be reinforcing the trajectory towards the evolution of adaptive traits.

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