TY - JOUR
T1 - Diversification of mandarin citrus by hybrid speciation and apomixis
AU - Wu, Guohong Albert
AU - Sugimoto, Chikatoshi
AU - Kinjo, Hideyasu
AU - Azama, Chika
AU - Mitsube, Fumimasa
AU - Talon, Manuel
AU - Gmitter, Frederick G.
AU - Rokhsar, Daniel S.
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Hiroshi Kobashigawa for sharing his expertize and hospitality, where the first C. ryukyuensis tree was observed, and to Yoshikatsu Yamakawa and Hiromitsu Yasumura from Katsuyama Shiikuwasha Co., Ltd. for their assistance and providing the Katsuyama mandarin accession related to all shiikuwasha. We thank Shuji Takino and Hideki Yamashiro for assistance in sample collection. We thank Nate Jameson for contributing his citrus expertise in the field in Okinawa, and John Willis for helpful discussions. We thank staff from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) DNA sequencing section, Onna, Okinawa for their help with the DNA-sequencing. This study was supported by OIST Internal Funds (D.S.R.). The collaborative efforts of G.A.W, D.S.R, and F.G.G are partially supported by a grant from the Citrus Research and Development Foundation (18-010), on behalf of the Florida citrus growers. The work conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, is supported under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231 (G.A.W, D.S.R). The work conducted by the Centro de Genomica at IVIA (Spain) is supported through grants No RTI2018-097790-R-100 (Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades/Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional) and No 51915 (IVIA)(MT). D. S.R. is grateful for the support of the Marthella Foskett Brown Chair in Biological Sciences. We thank the DNA Sequencing Section, and the Information Service Section of OIST for technical support. We thank Shuji Takino for samples of TB0 and TB6 from Hashimoto and Shingu in Shingu City in Wakayama prefecture and for help during the sampling of TB3 and TB4 from Arima in Kumano city in Mie prefecture; Hirofumi Hamada for samples of TB7 from Suno in Kumano City in Mie prefecture; Naoe Ooe for samples of TB5, TB8 and YZN from Nikou in Nachikatsuura town in Wakayama prefecture; Motofumi Yamasaki for samples of YZS and DDS from Shingu in Shingu City in Wakayama prefecture; Hirofumi Higa for samples of SH0, SH1, SH2, SH3, OTO, KBU and TRG from Asahikawa in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture; Okinawa Prefectural Agricultural Research Center (OPARC) of Nago in Nago city in Okinawa prefecture for samples of SH4; Yoshikatsu Yamakawa from Katsuyama Shiikuwasha Co., Ltd. of Kat-suyama in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture for samples of RK3, RK4, RK5, SH5 and SH6; Eijyun Zamami for samples of R15 and ISH from Izumi in Motobu Town in Okinawa prefecture; Masakazu Nakazato for samples of R02 from Katsuyama in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture; Hiroshi Kobashigawa for samples of SHI, RK1, RK2, RK7, RK8, RK9, TB1, TB2 and KB2 from Oogimi in Oogimi Village in Okinawa prefecture; Sachiko Miyagi for samples of RK6 from Oku in Kunigami Village in Okinawa prefecture; Hideki Yamashiro from Katsuyama Community Center on Katsuyama in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture for samples of R01 and R19; Tetsu Yonamine for samples of R07 from Kaneshi in Nakijin Village in Okinawa prefecture; Katsurou Kinjyou from a theme park called ‘Daisekirinzan,’ managed by Nanto Co., Ltd. of Ginama in Kunigami Village in Okinawa prefecture for samples of R05, R06 and R12; Kaori Miyazato for samples of R13 from Genka in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture; Yukihiro Shimabukuro for samples of R14 from Imadomari in Nakijin Village in Okinawa prefecture; Hideaki Oshiro for samples of R16, R17 and R18 from Katsuyama in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture; Chogi Miyagi for samples of R03 from Hama in Kunigami Village in Okinawa prefecture; Kiyoshi Miyagi for samples of R04 from Nuha in Oogimi Village in Okinawa prefecture; Noboru Teruya for samples of R00 from Tokijin in Nakijin Village in Okinawa prefecture; Tetsuo Shimabukuro for samples of KB1 from Inamine in Nago City in Okinawa prefecture; Tomohiro Chinen from a theme park called ‘Okinawa World,’ managed by Nanto Co., Ltd. of Tamashiro in Nanjyo City in Okinawa prefecture for samples of KB3, CAR, CI0, CI1, CI2, OBN, TK0 and TK1.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - The origin and dispersal of cultivated and wild mandarin and related citrus are poorly understood. Here, comparative genome analysis of 69 new east Asian genomes and other mainland Asian citrus reveals a previously unrecognized wild sexual species native to the Ryukyu Islands: C. ryukyuensis sp. nov. The taxonomic complexity of east Asian mandarins then collapses to a satisfying simplicity, accounting for tachibana, shiikuwasha, and other traditional Ryukyuan mandarin types as homoploid hybrid species formed by combining C. ryukyuensis with various mainland mandarins. These hybrid species reproduce clonally by apomictic seed, a trait shared with oranges, grapefruits, lemons and many cultivated mandarins. We trace the origin of apomixis alleles in citrus to mangshanyeju wild mandarins, which played a central role in citrus domestication via adaptive wild introgression. Our results provide a coherent biogeographic framework for understanding the diversity and domestication of mandarin-type citrus through speciation, admixture, and rapid diffusion of apomictic reproduction.
AB - The origin and dispersal of cultivated and wild mandarin and related citrus are poorly understood. Here, comparative genome analysis of 69 new east Asian genomes and other mainland Asian citrus reveals a previously unrecognized wild sexual species native to the Ryukyu Islands: C. ryukyuensis sp. nov. The taxonomic complexity of east Asian mandarins then collapses to a satisfying simplicity, accounting for tachibana, shiikuwasha, and other traditional Ryukyuan mandarin types as homoploid hybrid species formed by combining C. ryukyuensis with various mainland mandarins. These hybrid species reproduce clonally by apomictic seed, a trait shared with oranges, grapefruits, lemons and many cultivated mandarins. We trace the origin of apomixis alleles in citrus to mangshanyeju wild mandarins, which played a central role in citrus domestication via adaptive wild introgression. Our results provide a coherent biogeographic framework for understanding the diversity and domestication of mandarin-type citrus through speciation, admixture, and rapid diffusion of apomictic reproduction.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41467-021-24653-0
DO - 10.1038/s41467-021-24653-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 34312382
AN - SCOPUS:85111465562
VL - 12
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
SN - 2041-1723
IS - 1
M1 - 4377
ER -