Knowledge about the origins and evolution of crop species represents
an important prerequisite for efficient conservation and use
of existing plant materials. This study was designed to solve the
ongoing debate on the origins of the common bean by investigating
the nucleotide diversity at five gene loci of a large sample that
represents the entire geographical distribution of the wild forms of
this species. Our data clearly indicate a Mesoamerican origin of the
common bean. They also strongly support the occurrence of a
bottleneck during the formation of the Andean gene pool that
predates the domestication, which was suggested by recent studies
based on multilocus molecular markers. Furthermore, a remarkable
result was the genetic structure that was seen for the Mesoamerican
accessions, with the identification of four different genetic groups
that have different relationships with the sets of wild accessions
from the Andes and northern Peru–Ecuador. This finding implies
that both of the gene pools from South America originated through
different migration events from the Mesoamerican populations that
were characteristic of central Mexico
SummaryWe have studied the nucleotide diversity of common bean, Phaseolus vulgaris, which is characterized by two independent domestications in two geographically distinct areas: Mesoamerica and the Andes. This provides an important model, as domestication can be studied as a replicate experiment.We used nucleotide data from five gene fragments characterized by large introns to analyse 214 accessions (102 wild and 112 domesticated). The wild accessions represent a crosssection of the entire geographical distribution of P. vulgaris.A reduction in genetic diversity in both of these gene pools was found, which was threefold greater in Mesoamerica compared with the Andes. This appears to be a result of a bottleneck that occurred before domestication in the Andes, which strongly impoverished this wild germplasm, leading to the minor effect of the subsequent domestication bottleneck (i.e. sequential bottleneck).These findings show the importance of considering the evolutionary history of crop species as a major factor that influences their current level and structure of genetic diversity. Furthermore, these data highlight a single domestication event within each gene pool. Although the findings should be interpreted with caution, this evidence indicates the Oaxaca valley in Mesoamerica, and southern Bolivia and northern Argentina in South America, as the origins of common bean domestication.
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