The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Genomic insight into the origin, domestication, dispersal, diversification and human selection of Tartary buckwheat

Genomic insight into the origin, domestication, dispersal, diversification and human selection of Tartary buckwheat
Genomic insight into the origin, domestication, dispersal, diversification and human selection of Tartary buckwheat

Background: Tartary buckwheat, Fagopyrum tataricum, is a pseudocereal crop with worldwide distribution and high nutritional value. However, the origin and domestication history of this crop remain to be elucidated.

Results: here, by analyzing the population genomics of 567 accessions collected worldwide and reviewing historical documents, we find that Tartary buckwheat originated in the Himalayan region and then spread southwest possibly along with the migration of the Yi people, a minority in Southwestern China that has a long history of planting Tartary buckwheat. Along with the expansion of the Mongol Empire, Tartary buckwheat dispersed to Europe and ultimately to the rest of the world. The different natural growth environments resulted in adaptation, especially significant differences in salt tolerance between northern and southern Chinese Tartary buckwheat populations. By scanning for selective sweeps and using a genome-wide association study, we identify genes responsible for Tartary buckwheat domestication and differentiation, which we then experimentally validate. Comparative genomics and QTL analysis further shed light on the genetic foundation of the easily dehulled trait in a particular variety that was artificially selected by the Wa people, a minority group in Southwestern China known for cultivating Tartary buckwheat specifically for steaming as a staple food to prevent lysine deficiency.

Conclusions: this study provides both comprehensive insights into the origin and domestication of, and a foundation for molecular breeding for, Tartary buckwheat.

Domestication, Fagopyrum/genetics, Gene Expression Profiling, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genomics, Humans, Phylogeny, Southeast Asian People, Migration, Buckwheat, Artificial selection
1465-6906
He, Yuqi
b7260ec0-4a95-49f1-a341-ba6e6364d2d2
Zhang, Kaixuan
e55c3df9-35db-4ad8-bdc7-5aa293dbb303
Shi, Yaliang
fe5516d9-d3bd-4fa5-8f86-4d7ca53001a8
Lin, Hao
73a5d306-e6f1-4b89-b7dd-8730660f51da
Huang, Xu
e9a4cba7-54c7-423e-8e1e-69a37d537c33
Lu, Xiang
a952af74-cb28-4d60-9914-b9e13316fb61
Wang, Zhirong
bb078743-330e-4f94-9f8a-2777414df4f2
Li, Wei
ab5e097b-b347-4edf-95dd-2b245edf0f81
Feng, Xibo
7c486dea-2e89-4787-9efa-f1227e5e0c2a
Shi, Taoxiong
6393e8d5-ac0b-428b-a0e2-8c3e9cadd80b
Chen, Qingfu
7d2b2f3f-f878-4317-996d-5f128abdfc6e
Wang, Junzhen
25eafede-accd-45ff-b550-60028945c256
Tang, Yu
cdfb8d82-cb70-4f8e-a955-c3e93c0937f6
Chapman, Mark A.
8bac4a92-bfa7-4c3c-af29-9af852ef6383
Germ, Mateja
3dde2b17-cc80-4b6b-b1ce-7c2509e9b1f6
Luthar, Zlata
b916ff5f-cd9e-41db-9766-a6b7ca6cf109
Kreft, Ivan
25c9406f-65c0-4fcb-b70b-8e7dc3d29561
Janovská, Dagmar
a77914c3-afed-465a-b9e5-92c74f30486e
Meglič, Vladimir
1a5054f0-12a9-49cf-8e20-4b70e9565d55
Woo, Sun-Hee
87ddd742-65f8-464f-90a2-93d355126396
Quinet, Muriel
4c448b58-0584-452c-bfa9-f5285cf8c3ff
Fernie, Alisdair R.
e1f05617-14a4-4be2-99aa-6b7a4d878a65
Liu, Xu
88fb5317-1902-4631-ac5b-0a693c8c8b02
Zhou, Meiliang
d9044cc6-9c6c-4483-be2b-030b0ab04cbf
He, Yuqi
b7260ec0-4a95-49f1-a341-ba6e6364d2d2
Zhang, Kaixuan
e55c3df9-35db-4ad8-bdc7-5aa293dbb303
Shi, Yaliang
fe5516d9-d3bd-4fa5-8f86-4d7ca53001a8
Lin, Hao
73a5d306-e6f1-4b89-b7dd-8730660f51da
Huang, Xu
e9a4cba7-54c7-423e-8e1e-69a37d537c33
Lu, Xiang
a952af74-cb28-4d60-9914-b9e13316fb61
Wang, Zhirong
bb078743-330e-4f94-9f8a-2777414df4f2
Li, Wei
ab5e097b-b347-4edf-95dd-2b245edf0f81
Feng, Xibo
7c486dea-2e89-4787-9efa-f1227e5e0c2a
Shi, Taoxiong
6393e8d5-ac0b-428b-a0e2-8c3e9cadd80b
Chen, Qingfu
7d2b2f3f-f878-4317-996d-5f128abdfc6e
Wang, Junzhen
25eafede-accd-45ff-b550-60028945c256
Tang, Yu
cdfb8d82-cb70-4f8e-a955-c3e93c0937f6
Chapman, Mark A.
8bac4a92-bfa7-4c3c-af29-9af852ef6383
Germ, Mateja
3dde2b17-cc80-4b6b-b1ce-7c2509e9b1f6
Luthar, Zlata
b916ff5f-cd9e-41db-9766-a6b7ca6cf109
Kreft, Ivan
25c9406f-65c0-4fcb-b70b-8e7dc3d29561
Janovská, Dagmar
a77914c3-afed-465a-b9e5-92c74f30486e
Meglič, Vladimir
1a5054f0-12a9-49cf-8e20-4b70e9565d55
Woo, Sun-Hee
87ddd742-65f8-464f-90a2-93d355126396
Quinet, Muriel
4c448b58-0584-452c-bfa9-f5285cf8c3ff
Fernie, Alisdair R.
e1f05617-14a4-4be2-99aa-6b7a4d878a65
Liu, Xu
88fb5317-1902-4631-ac5b-0a693c8c8b02
Zhou, Meiliang
d9044cc6-9c6c-4483-be2b-030b0ab04cbf

He, Yuqi, Zhang, Kaixuan, Shi, Yaliang, Lin, Hao, Huang, Xu, Lu, Xiang, Wang, Zhirong, Li, Wei, Feng, Xibo, Shi, Taoxiong, Chen, Qingfu, Wang, Junzhen, Tang, Yu, Chapman, Mark A., Germ, Mateja, Luthar, Zlata, Kreft, Ivan, Janovská, Dagmar, Meglič, Vladimir, Woo, Sun-Hee, Quinet, Muriel, Fernie, Alisdair R., Liu, Xu and Zhou, Meiliang (2024) Genomic insight into the origin, domestication, dispersal, diversification and human selection of Tartary buckwheat. Genome Biology, 25 (1), [61]. (doi:10.1186/s13059-024-03203-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Tartary buckwheat, Fagopyrum tataricum, is a pseudocereal crop with worldwide distribution and high nutritional value. However, the origin and domestication history of this crop remain to be elucidated.

Results: here, by analyzing the population genomics of 567 accessions collected worldwide and reviewing historical documents, we find that Tartary buckwheat originated in the Himalayan region and then spread southwest possibly along with the migration of the Yi people, a minority in Southwestern China that has a long history of planting Tartary buckwheat. Along with the expansion of the Mongol Empire, Tartary buckwheat dispersed to Europe and ultimately to the rest of the world. The different natural growth environments resulted in adaptation, especially significant differences in salt tolerance between northern and southern Chinese Tartary buckwheat populations. By scanning for selective sweeps and using a genome-wide association study, we identify genes responsible for Tartary buckwheat domestication and differentiation, which we then experimentally validate. Comparative genomics and QTL analysis further shed light on the genetic foundation of the easily dehulled trait in a particular variety that was artificially selected by the Wa people, a minority group in Southwestern China known for cultivating Tartary buckwheat specifically for steaming as a staple food to prevent lysine deficiency.

Conclusions: this study provides both comprehensive insights into the origin and domestication of, and a foundation for molecular breeding for, Tartary buckwheat.

Text
TB origin and domestication - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (4MB)
Text
s13059-024-03203-z - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (4MB)

More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 27 February 2024
Published date: 27 February 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords: Domestication, Fagopyrum/genetics, Gene Expression Profiling, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genomics, Humans, Phylogeny, Southeast Asian People, Migration, Buckwheat, Artificial selection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487787
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487787
ISSN: 1465-6906
PURE UUID: 769ba3a8-b795-4336-beec-469f9a50eb16
ORCID for Mark A. Chapman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7151-723X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Mar 2024 18:12
Last modified: 27 Apr 2024 01:50

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Yuqi He
Author: Kaixuan Zhang
Author: Yaliang Shi
Author: Hao Lin
Author: Xu Huang
Author: Xiang Lu
Author: Zhirong Wang
Author: Wei Li
Author: Xibo Feng
Author: Taoxiong Shi
Author: Qingfu Chen
Author: Junzhen Wang
Author: Yu Tang
Author: Mark A. Chapman ORCID iD
Author: Mateja Germ
Author: Zlata Luthar
Author: Ivan Kreft
Author: Dagmar Janovská
Author: Vladimir Meglič
Author: Sun-Hee Woo
Author: Muriel Quinet
Author: Alisdair R. Fernie
Author: Xu Liu
Author: Meiliang Zhou

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×