Phylogenetic Relationship Among Wild and Cultivated Grapevine in Sicily: A Hotspot in the Middle of the Mediterranean Basin

Grapevine ( ssp. ) is a perennial crop especially important for wine and fruit production. The species is highly polymorphic with thousands of different varieties selected by farmers and clonally propagated. However, it is still debated whether grapevine domestication from its wild ancestor ( ssp. )...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in plant science 2019-11, Vol.10, p.1506-1506
Hauptverfasser: De Michele, Roberto, La Bella, Francesca, Gristina, Alessandro Silvestre, Fontana, Ignazio, Pacifico, Davide, Garfi, Giuseppe, Motisi, Antonio, Crucitti, Dalila, Abbate, Loredana, Carimi, Francesco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Grapevine ( ssp. ) is a perennial crop especially important for wine and fruit production. The species is highly polymorphic with thousands of different varieties selected by farmers and clonally propagated. However, it is still debated whether grapevine domestication from its wild ancestor ( ssp. ) has been a single event or rather it occurred on multiple occasions during the diffusion of its cultivation across the Mediterranean. Located in the center of the Basin, Sicily is its largest island and has served as a hotspot for all civilizations that have crossed the Mediterranean throughout history. Hundreds of unique grapevine cultivars are still cultivated in Sicily and its surrounding minor islands, though most of them are menaced by extinction. Wild grapevine is also present with isolated populations thriving along riverbanks. With the aim to evaluate the phylogenetic relationships among Sicilian varieties, and to assess the possible contribution of indigenous wild populations to the genetic makeup of cultivated grapevine, we analyzed 170 domestic cultivars and 125 wild plants, collected from 10 different populations, with 23 SSR markers. We also compared our data with published dataset from Eurasia. Results show that Sicilian wild populations are related to the cultivated Sicilian and Italian germplasm, suggesting events of introgression and/or domestication of local varieties.
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2019.01506