Sunflower genes don't fit pattern. (Domestication).Comparison between crop and wild sunflower genes suggests that the plant followed an easy route to domestication domestication Process of hereditary reorganization of wild animals and plants into forms more accommodating to the interests of people. In its strictest sense, it refers to the initial stage of human mastery of wild animals and plants. . Archaeologists estimate that people transformed wild sunflowers into a user-friendly form some 4,000 years ago, explains John M. Burke, now at Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt University, at Nashville, Tenn.; coeducational; chartered 1872 as Central Univ. of Methodist Episcopal Church, founded and renamed 1873, opened 1875 through a gift from Cornelius Vanderbilt. Until 1914 it operated under the auspices of the Methodist Church. in Nashville. The shift conferred traits such as self-fertilization and bigger seeds. To examine the underlying genetics, Burke and Loren Rieseberg of Indiana University in Bloomington crossed a plant of a commercial variety with a wild sunflower and then let the offspring self-fertilize. After a second round of sunflower self-fertilization, the pair used genetic markers to locate stretches of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. that control 18 traits that differ between wild and crop sunflowers. In corn, for example, just five regions explain most of the difference between modern crops and wild teosinte teosinte: see corn, in botany. teosinte Tall, stout, annual grass (Zea mexicana or Euchlaena mexicana) of the family Poaceae (or Gramineae), native to Mexico. . In sunflowers, though, Burke found about 20 genetic regions tied to domesticated do·mes·ti·cate tr.v. do·mes·ti·cat·ed, do·mes·ti·cat·ing, do·mes·ti·cates 1. To cause to feel comfortable at home; make domestic. 2. To adopt or make fit for domestic use or life. 3. a. traits. Burke also found that many versions of genes valuable to sunflower farmers pop up in the wild. Overall, he says, the evidence suggests that people domesticated sunflowers by repeatedly selecting wild plants instead of finding a few with breakthrough mutations. The issue of sunflower origins heated up last year when researchers found what looks like an ancient domesticated sunflower seed in Mexico. That challenged the view that domesticated sunflowers started in the eastern or central United States The Central United States is sometimes conceived as between the Eastern United States and Western United States as part of a three-region model, roughly coincident with the Midwestern United States plus the western and central portions of the Southern United States; the term is . Could sunflowers have been domesticated more than once? "Our study doesn't bear directly on that, but the genetics suggest it's possible;' Burke says.--S. M. |
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