The genomes of ancient date palms germinated from 2,000 y old seeds
580
Crops, Agricultural
570
0303 health sciences
DNA, Plant
Genotype
introgression
Phoeniceae
Germination
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Biological Sciences
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
domestication
03 medical and health sciences
Seeds
crop evolution
ancient DNA
hybridization
Genome, Plant
History, Ancient
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2025337118
Publication Date:
2021-05-03T20:56:21Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Significance
Resurrection genomics is an alternative to ancient DNA approaches in studying the genetics and evolution of past and possibly extinct populations. By reviving biological material such as germinating ancient seeds from archaeological and paleontological sites, or historical collections, one can study genomes of lost populations. We applied this approach by sequencing the genomes of seven Judean date palms (
Phoenix dactylifera
) that were germinated from ∼2,000 y old seeds recovered in the Southern Levant. Using this genomic data, we were able to document that introgressive hybridization of the wild Cretan palm
Phoenix theophrasti
into date palms had occurred in the Eastern Mediterranean by ∼2,200 y ago and examine the evolution of date palm populations in this pivotal region two millennia ago.
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