Carotenoid Presence Is Associated with the Or Gene in Domesticated Carrot.

Resource Type: 
Publication
Publication Type: 
Journal Article
Title: 
Carotenoid Presence Is Associated with the Or Gene in Domesticated Carrot.
Authors: 
Ellison SL, Luby CH, Corak KE, Coe KM, Senalik D, Iorizzo M, Goldman IL, Simon PW, Dawson JC
Series Name: 
Genetics
Journal Abbreviation: 
Genetics
Volume: 
210
Issue: 
4
Page Numbers: 
1497-1508
Publication Year: 
2018
Publication Date: 
2018 12
DOI: 
10.1534/genetics.118.301299
ISSN: 
1943-2631
EISSN: 
1943-2631
Cross Reference: 
PMIDLoading content
Citation: 
Ellison SL, Luby CH, Corak KE, Coe KM, Senalik D, Iorizzo M, Goldman IL, Simon PW, Dawson JC. Carotenoid Presence Is Associated with the Or Gene in Domesticated Carrot.. Genetics. 2018 12; 210(4):1497-1508.
Abstract: 

Carrots are among the richest sources of provitamin A carotenes in the human diet, but genetic variation in the carotenoid pathway does not fully explain the high levels of carotenoids in carrot roots. Using a diverse collection of modern and historic domesticated varieties, and wild carrot accessions, an association analysis for orange pigmentation revealed a significant genomic region that contains the Or gene, advancing it as a candidate for carotenoid presence in carrot. Analysis of sequence variation at the Or locus revealed a nonsynonymous mutation cosegregating with carotenoid content. This mutation was absent in all wild carrot samples and nearly fixed in all orange domesticated samples. Or has been found to control carotenoid presence in other crops but has not previously been described in carrot. Our analysis also allowed us to more completely characterize the genetic structure of carrot, showing that the Western domesticated carrot largely forms one genetic group, despite dramatic phenotypic differences among market classes. Eastern domesticated and wild accessions form a second group, which reflects the recent cultivation history of carrots in Central Asia. Other wild accessions form distinct geographic groups, particularly on the Iberian peninsula and in Northern Africa. Using genome-wide Fst , nucleotide diversity, and the cross-population composite likelihood ratio, we analyzed the genome for regions putatively under selection during domestication and identified 12 regions that were significant for all three methods of detection, one of which includes the Or gene. The Or domestication allele appears to have been selected after the initial domestication of yellow carrots in the East, near the proposed center of domestication in Central Asia. The rapid fixation of the Or domestication allele in almost all orange and nonorange carrots in the West may explain why it has not been found with less genetically diverse mapping populations.

Publication Model: 
Print-Electronic
Language: 
English
Language Abbr: 
eng
Journal Country: 
United States