Complete Resequencing of 40 Genomes Reveals Domestication Events and Genes in Silkworm ( <i>Bombyx</i> )

Qingyou Xia(Southwest University), Yiran Guo(BGI Group (China)), Ze Zhang(Southwest University), Dong Li(BGI Group (China)), Dong Li(BGI Group (China)), Zhaoling Xuan(BGI Group (China)), Zhuo Li(BGI Group (China)), Fangyin Dai(BGI Group (China)), Yingrui Li(BGI Group (China)), Daojun Cheng(BGI Group (China)), Ruiqiang Li(BGI Group (China)), Tingcai Cheng(BGI Group (China)), Tao Jiang(BGI Group (China)), Céline Becquet(BGI Group (China)), Xun Xu(BGI Group (China)), Chun Liu(Southwest University), Xingfu Zha(BGI Group (China)), Wei Fan(BGI Group (China)), Ying Lin(Southwest University), Yihong Shen(BGI Group (China)), Lan Jiang(BGI Group (China)), Jeffrey D. Jensen(University of California, Berkeley), Ines Hellmann(University of California, Berkeley), Si Tang(Southwest University), Ping Zhao(Southwest University), Hanfu Xu(BGI Group (China)), Chang Yu(BGI Group (China)), Guojie Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Jun Li(BGI Group (China)), Jianjun Cao(BGI Group (China)), Shiping Liu(Southwest University), Ningjia He(BGI Group (China)), Yan Zhou(BGI Group (China)), Hui Liu(BGI Group (China)), Jing Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Chen Ye(BGI Group (China)), Du ZhouHe(Southwest University), Guoqing Pan(Southwest University), Aichun Zhao(BGI Group (China)), Haojing Shao(BGI Group (China)), Wei Zeng(BGI Group (China)), Ping Wu(BGI Group (China)), Chunfeng Li(Southwest University), Min‐Hui Pan(BGI Group (China)), Jinɡjinɡ Li(BGI Group (China)), Xuyang Yin(BGI Group (China)), Dawei Li(BGI Group (China)), Dawei Li(BGI Group (China)), Juan Wang(BGI Group (China)), Juan Wang(BGI Group (China)), Huisong Zheng(BGI Group (China)), Wen Wang(BGI Group (China)), Xiuqing Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Songgang Li(BGI Group (China)), Huanming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Cheng Lu(BGI Group (China)), Rasmus Nielsen(University of Copenhagen), Zeyang Zhou(BGI Group (China)), Jian Wang(BGI Group (China)), Jian Wang(BGI Group (China)), Zhonghuai Xiang(Southwest University), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China)), Jun Wang(BGI Group (China))
Science
August 28, 2009
Cited by 379Open Access
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Abstract

A single-base pair resolution silkworm genetic variation map was constructed from 40 domesticated and wild silkworms, each sequenced to approximately threefold coverage, representing 99.88% of the genome. We identified ~16 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms, many indels, and structural variations. We find that the domesticated silkworms are clearly genetically differentiated from the wild ones, but they have maintained large levels of genetic variability, suggesting a short domestication event involving a large number of individuals. We also identified signals of selection at 354 candidate genes that may have been important during domestication, some of which have enriched expression in the silk gland, midgut, and testis. These data add to our understanding of the domestication processes and may have applications in devising pest control strategies and advancing the use of silkworms as efficient bioreactors.


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