Ustilago maydispopulations tracked maize through domestication and cultivation in the Americas
Open Access
- 5 February 2008
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 275 (1638), 1037-1046
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2007.1636
Abstract
The domestication of crops and the development of agricultural societies not only brought about major changes in human interactions with the environment but also in plants' interactions with the diseases that challenge them. We evaluated the impact of the domestication of maize from teosinte and the widespread cultivation of maize on the historical demography of Ustilago maydis, a fungal pathogen of maize. To determine the evolutionary response of the pathogen's populations, we obtained multilocus genotypes for 1088 U. maydis diploid individuals from two teosinte subspecies in Mexico and from maize in Mexico and throughout the Americas. Results identified five major U. maydis populations: two in Mexico; two in South America; and one in the United States. The two populations in Mexico diverged from the other populations at times comparable to those for the domestication of maize at 6000–10 000 years before present. Maize domestication and agriculture enforced sweeping changes in U. maydis populations such that the standing variation in extant pathogen populations reflects evolution only since the time of the crop's domestication.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- The origin and colonization history of the barley scald pathogen Rhynchosporium secalisJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2007
- An Andean origin of Phytophthora infestans inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear gene genealogiesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Kgtests: a simple Excel Macro program to detect signatures of population expansion using microsatellitesMolecular Ecology Notes, 2007
- Global Hierarchical Gene Diversity Analysis Suggests the Fertile Crescent Is Not the Center of Origin of the Barley Scald PathogenRhynchosporium secalisPhytopathology®, 2006
- Genome‐wide assessment of tandem repeat markers for biogeographical analyses of the corn smut fungus, Ustilago maydisMolecular Ecology Notes, 2005
- The Biology of Phytophthora infestans at Its Center of OriginAnnual Review of Phytopathology, 2005
- Detecting the number of clusters of individuals using the software structure: a simulation studyMolecular Ecology, 2005
- Migration patterns among global populations of the pathogenic fungus Mycosphaerella graminicolaMolecular Ecology, 2005
- Physiologic Specialization of Puccinia triticina on Wheat in the United States in 2002Plant Disease, 2004
- The Population Genetics of PhytophthoraPhytopathology®, 1997