Journal
MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 277, Issue 6, Pages 619-629Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00438-007-0213-5
Keywords
R-gene variation; polymorphism; between and within populations; Arabidopsis
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An understanding of the variation pattern in disease resistance (R) genes is essential for its use in breeding programs aimed at neutralizing the threat of pathogens. Although the variation between populations is well known, there is little research about R-gene variation patterns within populations. Here, we investigate the polymorphism at three R-gene loci of 39 individual plants from nine populations of Arabidopsis thaliana. Our data suggest that alleles of each locus from individuals within a local population were either nearly identical, or highly diverse as ones between populations. The vast majority (92.5%) of within-population variation was shared globally, with high levels of allelic diversity (up to 11.7%) and abundant diverse-alleles. This unique pattern of within-population variation at R-loci suggests that individual plants within a population had the great potential to maintain a high level of globally-shared polymorphisms, and that the diversifying selection was the major force maintaining such polymorphisms. Consequently, the shared-polymorphism became recyclable for new R-genes, as the corresponding avirulence re-emerges in pathogen populations.
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