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Evolution of the Grain Dispersal System in Barley
Author(s) -
Mohammad Pourkheirandish,
Göetz Hensel,
Benjamin Kilian,
N. Senthil,
Guoxiong Chen,
Mohammad Sameri,
Perumal Azhaguvel,
Shun Sakuma,
Sidram Dhanagond,
Rajiv Sharma,
Martin Mascher,
Axel Himmelbach,
Sven Gottwald,
Sudha Nair,
Akemi Tagiri,
Fumiko Yukuhiro,
Yoshiaki Nagamura,
Hiroyuki Kanamori,
Takashi Matsumoto,
George Willcox,
Christopher Middleton,
Thomas Wicker,
Alexander Walther,
Robbie Waugh,
Geoffrey B. Fincher,
Nils Stein,
Jochen Kumlehn,
Kazuhiro Sato,
Takao Komatsuda
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2015.07.002
Subject(s) - biology , biological dispersal , evolutionary biology , agronomy , demography , sociology , population
About 12,000 years ago in the Near East, humans began the transition from hunter-gathering to agriculture-based societies. Barley was a founder crop in this process, and the most important steps in its domestication were mutations in two adjacent, dominant, and complementary genes, through which grains were retained on the inflorescence at maturity, enabling effective harvesting. Independent recessive mutations in each of these genes caused cell wall thickening in a highly specific grain "disarticulation zone," converting the brittle floral axis (the rachis) of the wild-type into a tough, non-brittle form that promoted grain retention. By tracing the evolutionary history of allelic variation in both genes, we conclude that spatially and temporally independent selections of germplasm with a non-brittle rachis were made during the domestication of barley by farmers in the southern and northern regions of the Levant, actions that made a major contribution to the emergence of early agrarian societies.

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