DSSS - Colorful evolution: Macro- and microevolutionary adventures in wild tomato genomes
- Datum: 08.12.2023
- Uhrzeit: 15:00 - 16:00
- Vortragende: Prof. Leonie Moyle
- The Moyle Lab - Dept. of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington
- Ort: NO.002, MPI für Intelligente Systeme
Beyond being an important source of variation
for breeding, wild relatives of crop species also provide unique opportunities
to examine evolutionary processes in nature. Nightshades (Solanaceae) are one such
group in which genomic and functional information from several model systems (including
tomato, potato, and Nicotiana) can be paired with wild diversity, to examine
the origin and distribution of natural variation, to infer the genetics of
natural traits, and to understand the forces that drive diversification at
micro- and macroevolutionary scales. In this talk, I’ll focus on our
evolutionary and population genomics analyses of wild tomatoes, and what these
reveal about the evolution of key adaptive traits such as fruit color. Using
genome-wide genotyping in combination with historical and contemporary field
collections, we have inferred the timing of evolutionary changes in fruit color,
the identity of underlying causal loci, and evidence for recent repeated phenotypic
convergence via introgression on the Galapagos islands. These
studies suggest fruitful avenues for using the broader range of wild nightshade
variation to understand the genetics of traits that are relevant for both
agriculture and adaptive diversification.