Title: Genetic Variation
1Genetic Variation
1
- Occurrence of heritable or non-heritable
differences - Among populations, among individuals, among cells
- Variation divided into three primary categories
- Phenotypic total biological variation
- Continuous that variation from quantitative
characters - Discontinuous that variation from qualitative
characters - In a segregating population, variation can be
expressed as - Vp Vg Ve
- Where g genetic factors and eenvironmental
factors - Proportion due to genetics is heritability
- Vg can be due to additivity, dominance, and/or
epistasis
22
Sources of Genetic Variation
- Mutation
- Chromosome aberrations
- Recombination
- Crossing Over
- Independent Assortment
33
Mutation
- Highly variable across loci in maize (Stadler,
1942) - Gene Gametes Tested Mutations
Rate - R 554,786 273 492 per million
- Su 1,678,736 4 2.4 per
million - Wx 1,503,744 0 0 per
million
44
Variation Under Domestication
Darwin, Variation Under Domestication, 1868
- Domesticated forms vary more than wild
progenitors - Slight variations are preserved by humans
- The most variation is found in the characters
with the most importance, such as the seed of the
bean - Species have been selected into varieties, which
vary greatly for particular characters - It may be that..a gooseberry larger than the
London variety (will not be produced), but he
would be a bold man who would assert that the
extreme limit in these respects has been finally
attained.
55
The part of the plant of greatest interest to man
is the part that is modified the most. - J.R.
Harlan
6Who Domesticated Whom?
- Through trial and error these plant species
have found that the best way to do that is to
induce animals- bees or people, it hardly mattes-
to spread their genes. How? By playing on the
animals desires, conscious and otherwise. The
flowers and spuds that manage to do this most
effectively are the ones that get to be fruitful
and multiply. - So the question arose in my mind that day Did I
choose to plant these potatoes, or did the potato
make me do it? - Michael Pollan, The Botany of Desire
76
Centers of Origin
- De Candolle proposed crop origins in late 19th
century - Vavilov made collections from 1916-1938, proposed
eight major centers of origin for cultivated
plants
1 China 2 India 2a Indo-Ma 3 C. Asia 4 Near
East 5 Medit. 6 Ethiopia 7 Mexico 8 S. Amer. 8a
Chile 8b Brazil
1 3 2 2a
7 8 8a 8b
5 4 6
87
Centers of Origin
- Darlington and Hanaki Ammal described 12 centers,
1945 increasing contribution from the Americas - Zhukovskij proposed megagene centers in 1968,
increasing size of centers - Harlan suggested centers and non-centers in 1971,
where non-center refers to a large geographic
area in which domestication may have occurred in
multiple events
Vavilovs centers and crop examples
Chinese Lettuce, rhubarb, soybean,
turnip Indian Cucumber, mango, cotton,
rice Indo-Malayan Banana, coconut, yam Central
Asia Almond, cantaloupe, flax, lentil Near
Eastern Alfalfa, apple, cabbage,
rye Mediterranean Celery, chick pea, durum
wheat Ethiopian Coffee, sorghum, millet Central
American Lima bean, maize, papaya, cotton South
American Cotton, potato, pumpkin, tomato
98
Natural and Agricultural Variation
- Wild
- Naturally-occurring populations
- Weedy
- Plant populations not desired for cultivation but
modified by the practice of agriculture, either
directly or indirectly, and growing in wild or
cultivated environments. Plant out of place
definition works here. - Landrace
- Selected for use in agriculture, often highly
heterogenous populations, broad-based, possessing
large amounts of genetic variability
109
Law of Homologous Series
- Vavilov Law of Homologous Series in variation
- The more similar species are, the more similar
are their variations - Common occurrence of characters in similar
species or in particular geographic regions - Natural selection favored certain phenotypes in
particular environments - Disease resistance an example
- Similar to modern ideas used in comparative
mapping and genomics
1110
Politics and Germplasm
- Vavilov was a brilliant geneticist
- All-Union Institute of Plant Breeding
- Suggested crop improvement strategies through
collection of wild relatives from crop centers
and carrying out breeding programs - These programs typically take a long time
- His ideas challenged by Trofim Lysenko, a
favorite of Stalin - Lysenko (peasant background) was a Lamarckian,
suggested cold treatments could hasten maturity
in heritable way
1211
Politics and Germplasm
- Lysenko promised quick gains in crop improvement
- Mendelian heredity was held in low regard by
Stalins regime, as was germplasm collecting and
fascistic foreign science in general - Vavilov was removed from his post in 1935,
despite being elected president to the Seventh
International Congress of Genetics - He was replaced by Lysenko and eventually
arrested in 1940 while on a collecting trip in
the Ukraine - Vavilov died in prison in 1943
- His ideas form the foundation of the way plant
breeders view germplasm resources today - He was Martyr to Genetic Truth (Crow, 1993,
Genetics134)
1312
Public Exploration
- Commerce and Trade
- Centers of production were far removed from
centers of origin - Commodities trade caused plant introduction
- European diet changed introduction of the potato
- The Potato (Larry Zuckerman) outlines cultural
and political trends affecting adoption of potato
by Europeans - Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, England, 1760
- U.S. Government
- U.S. Navy and introduction of the Lima bean
- Japanese expedition
- Morrill Act in 1862
- David Fairchild, U.S. plant explorer
- The World Was My Garden
- Mark Carleton, Kharkov Red Winter Wheat
1413
The work of Charles Rick has made UC-Davis a home
for the use of variation in tomato breeding for
50 years
UW-Madison, and particularly the potato breeding
programs, have focused on use of variation in
breeding efforts
1514
Genetic Variation Theoretical Implications
Rasmusson and Phillips, 1997, Crop Sci. 37303-310
- Given that progress in plant breeding continues
at a high rate - Favorable alleles are increasing in frequency in
populations - Theoretically, favorable alleles will become
fixed - And genetic variation should become reduced
- So it would make sense to continuously bring in
new variation - However, programs designed to do this have not
been as successful as those programs using only
elite germplasm - For many crops, standard breeding procedures
systematically reduce genetic diversity - For many crops, few germplasm sources make up
much of the modern germplasm base (corn, barley,
onion, etc.)
1615
Why have selection limits not been reached in the
Illinois long Term Selection experiment
despite 100 generations of continued selection?
1716
Barley Improvement
- Rasmusson and Phillips, 1997, Crop Science37
- Manchuria barley introduced early in 20th century
- Many of the breeding programs in the Midwest and
Canada shared germplasm - Industry Quality Guidelines required a profile
of 22 traits- which dictated new cultivars like
the old ones - The main cultivars, developed in the Minnesota
breeding program, have increased in performance
over the past 50 years, however all are closely
related - Modest levels of genetic diversity based on
pedigree information permit sizeable genetic
gains - Performance gains cant necessarily be explained
because genetic diversity is so low
1817
Barley Improvement
- Rasmusson and Phillips, 1997, Crop Science37
- Breeders have stayed away from exotic germplasm
because only rarely do elite x exotic crosses
lead to gains - Gene frequency changes have been huge between
elite and exotic populations, making it hard to
recover desirable types - Questions to be asked include
- How much useful diversity is in elite breeding
germplasm? - How successful are efforts to introduce exotic
diversity? - Is useful variation being created within working
elite germplasm?
1918
Questioning Diversity
- Rasmusson and Phillips, 1997, Crop Science37
- Did all useful diversity exist in parental
populations, or is novel variation arising during
the breeding process? - Two new sources are mutations and epistatic
interactions - Fixation does not appear to have been reached in
the ILTSE, despite highly inbred strains and 100
generations of selection - Models tell us we should arrive at allele
fixation after much selection and inbreeding - Does this suggest a dis-connect between
traditional theory and actual practice?
2019
De Novo Variation?
- Rasmusson and Phillips, 1997, Crop Science37
- Intragenic recombination clearly demonstrated
- Unequal crossing over common- many genes in
tandem array, and displaced pairing followed by
crossing over can generate novel variants - Transposable elements and retrotransposons
- DNA methylation associated with gene expression
- Paramutation, which involves interaction of
alleles in a heterozygote - Gene amplification
- All of these mechanisms can cause new variation
during the breeding process