4.7 Article

Evidence of an additional centre of apple domestication in Iran, with contributions from the Caucasian crab apple Malus orientalis Uglitzk. to the cultivated apple gene pool

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 21, Pages 5581-5601

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16667

Keywords

apple; Caucasus; climate; crop-wild gene flow; domestication; fruit tree; introgression; Iran

Funding

  1. ATIP-Avenir CNRS Inserm
  2. Campus France [Gundhishapur 2016-2018 PomFlux]

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The study identified two genetically distinct cultivated populations in Iran and seven genetically differentiated populations of wild apple. Iran was confirmed as a key region in the domestication of apple, and the domestication of the apple tree involved multiple origins in different geographic locations and substantial crop-wild hybridization.
Divergence processes in crop-wild fruit tree complexes in pivotal regions for plant domestication such as the Caucasus and Iran remain little studied. We investigated anthropogenic and natural divergence processes in apples in these regions using 26 microsatellite markers amplified in 550 wild and cultivated samples. We found two genetically distinct cultivated populations in Iran that are differentiated from Malus domestica, the standard cultivated apple worldwide. Coalescent-based inferences showed that these two cultivated populations originated from specific domestication events of Malus orientalis in Iran. We found evidence of substantial wild-crop and crop-crop gene flow in the Caucasus and Iran, as has been described in apple in Europe. In addition, we identified seven genetically differentiated populations of wild apple (M. orientalis), not introgressed by the cultivated apple. Niche modelling combined with genetic diversity estimates indicated that these wild populations likely resulted from range changes during past glaciations. This study identifies Iran as a key region in the domestication of apple and M. orientalis as an additional contributor to the cultivated apple gene pool. Domestication of the apple tree therefore involved multiple origins of domestication in different geographic locations and substantial crop-wild hybridization, as found in other fruit trees. This study also highlights the impact of climate change on the natural divergence of a wild fruit tree and provides a starting point for apple conservation and breeding programmes in the Caucasus and Iran.

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