Multiple origins of cultivated grapevine (<i>Vitis vinifera</i> L. ssp. <i>sativa</i>) based on chloroplast DNA polymorphisms

Rosa Arroyo-García(Centro Nacional de Biotecnología), Leonor Ruiz‐García(Centro Nacional de Biotecnología), L. BOLLING(Centro Nacional de Biotecnología), R. OCETE(Universidad de Sevilla), M. Á. López(Universidad de Sevilla), C. Arnold(University of Neuchâtel), Ali Ergül(Ankara University), G. SÖYLEMEZO ̋LU(Ankara University), H.I. Uzun(Akdeniz University), Félix Cabello, Javier Ibáñez, Mallikarjuna Aradhya(National Clonal Germplasm Repository), Ivan Atanassov(Agrobioinstitute), Ivan Atanassov(Agrobioinstitute), S. BALINT("Ion Ionescu de la Brad" Iasi University of Life Sciences), José Luis Cenís(Instituto de Arqueología-Mérida), Laura Costantini, S. M. Gorislavets, S. Grando, Benjamin Klein(Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Patrick E. McGovern(University of Pennsylvania), Didier Merdinoglu, I. Pejić(University of Zagreb), Frédérique Pelsy, Nikolas I. Primikirios(University of Crete), V. I. Risovannaya, Kalliopi A. Roubelakis–Angelakis(University of Crete), H. SNOUSSI(Institut National Agronomique de Tunisie), Petraq Sotiri(Academy of Sciences of Albania), Shubhada Tamhankar(Agharkar Research Institute), Patrice This(Arts et Métiers), L. P. Troshin(Kuban State Agrarian University), José M. Malpica, François Lefort(HES-SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland), José M. Martı́nez-Zapater(Centro Nacional de Biotecnología)
Molecular Ecology
July 25, 2006
Cited by 483Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The domestication of the Eurasian grape ( Vitis vinifera ssp. sativa ) from its wild ancestor ( Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris ) has long been claimed to have occurred in Transcaucasia where its greatest genetic diversity is found and where very early archaeological evidence, including grape pips and artefacts of a ‘wine culture’, have been excavated. Whether from Transcaucasia or the nearby Taurus or Zagros Mountains, it is hypothesized that this wine culture spread southwards and eventually westwards around the Mediterranean basin, together with the transplantation of cultivated grape cuttings. However, the existence of morphological differentiation between cultivars from eastern and western ends of the modern distribution of the Eurasian grape suggests the existence of different genetic contribution from local sylvestris populations or multilocal selection and domestication of sylvestris genotypes. To tackle this issue, we analysed chlorotype variation and distribution in 1201 samples of sylvestris and sativa genotypes from the whole area of the species’ distribution and studied their genetic relationships. The results suggest the existence of at least two important origins for the cultivated germplasm, one in the Near East and another in the western Mediterranean region, the latter of which gave rise to many of the current Western European cultivars. Indeed, over 70% of the Iberian Peninsula cultivars display chlorotypes that are only compatible with their having derived from western sylvestris populations.


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