4.8 Article

Multiple modes of convergent adaptation in the spread of glyphosate-resistant Amaranthus tuberculatus

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1900870116

关键词

parallel evolution; herbicide resistance; de novo mutation; gene flow; population genomics

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. NSERC E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship
  3. NSERC
  4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at University of Toronto
  5. International Max Planck Research School Molecules to Organisms
  6. Max Planck Society
  7. Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts of Baden-Wurttemberg in the Regio-Research-Alliance Yield Stability in Dynamic Environments

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The selection pressure exerted by herbicides has led to the repeated evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds. The evolution of herbicide resistance on contemporary timescales in turn provides an outstanding opportunity to investigate key questions about the genetics of adaptation, in particular the relative importance of adaptation from new mutations, standing genetic variation, or geographic spread of adaptive alleles through gene flow. Glyphosate-resistant Amaranthus tuberculatus poses one of the most significant threats to crop yields in the Midwestern United States, with both agricultural populations and herbicide resistance only recently emerging in Canada. To understand the evolutionary mechanisms driving the spread of resistance, we sequenced and assembled the A. tuberculatus genome and investigated the origins and population genomics of 163 resequenced glyphosate-resistant and susceptible individuals from Canada and the United States. In Canada, we discovered multiple modes of convergent evolution: in one locality, resistance appears to have evolved through introductions of preadapted US genotypes, while in another, there is evidence for the independent evolution of resistance on genomic backgrounds that are historically nonagricultural. Moreover, resistance on these local, nonagricultural backgrounds appears to have occurred predominantly through the partial sweep of a single haplotype. In contrast, resistant haplotypes arising from the Midwestern United States show multiple amplification haplotypes segregating both between and within populations. Therefore, while the remarkable species-wide diversity of A. tuberculatus has facilitated geographic parallel adaptation of glyphosate resistance, more recently established agricultural populations are limited to adaptation in a more mutation-limited framework.

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