Molecular ecology2022,Vol.31Issue(18) :16.DOI:10.1111/mec.16629

Frozen in time: Rangewide genomic diversity, structure, and demographic history of relict American chestnut populations

Alexander M. Sandercock Jared W. Westbrook Qian Zhang Hayley A. Johnson Thomas M. Saielli John A. Scrivani Sara F. Fitzsimmons Kendra Collins Matthew Taylor Perkins James Hill Craddock Jeremy Schmutz Jane Grimwood Jason A. Holliday
Molecular ecology2022,Vol.31Issue(18) :16.DOI:10.1111/mec.16629

Frozen in time: Rangewide genomic diversity, structure, and demographic history of relict American chestnut populations

Alexander M. Sandercock 1Jared W. Westbrook 2Qian Zhang 1Hayley A. Johnson 1Thomas M. Saielli 2John A. Scrivani 2Sara F. Fitzsimmons 2Kendra Collins 2Matthew Taylor Perkins 3James Hill Craddock 3Jeremy Schmutz 4Jane Grimwood 4Jason A. Holliday1
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作者信息

  • 1. Virginia Tech
  • 2. The American Chestnut Foundation
  • 3. The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
  • 4. HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology
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Abstract

Abstract American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was once the most economically and ecologically important hardwood species in the eastern United States. In the first half of the 20th century, an exotic fungal pathogen—Cryphonectria parasitica—decimated the species, killing billions of chestnut trees. Two approaches to developing blight‐resistant American chestnut populations show promise, but both will require introduction of adaptive genomic diversity from wild germplasm to produce diverse, locally adapted restoration populations. Here we characterize population structure, demographic history, and genomic diversity in a range‐wide sample of 384 wild American chestnuts to inform conservation and breeding with blight‐resistant varieties. Population structure analyses suggest that the chestnut range can be roughly divided into northeast, central, and southwest populations. Within‐population genomic diversity estimates revealed a clinal pattern with the highest diversity in the southwest, which likely reflects bottleneck events associated with Quaternary glaciation. Finally, we identified genomic regions under positive selection within each population, which suggests that defence against fungal pathogens is a common target of selection across all populations. Taken together, these results show that American chestnut underwent a postglacial expansion from the southern portion of its range leading to three extant genetic populations. These populations will serve as management units for breeding adaptive genetic variation into the blight‐resistant tree populations for targeted reintroduction efforts.

Key words

Castanea dentata/genomic diversity/population genomics/restoration/selection/whole genome sequencing

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出版年

2022
Molecular ecology

Molecular ecology

SCI
ISSN:0962-1083
被引量2
参考文献量95
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