Affiliations 

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Resources, School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, 510275, China
  • 2 Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand
  • 3 Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, 63105, USA
  • 4 Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
  • 5 Codon Genomics, Seri Kembangan, Malaysia
  • 6 Plant Genetic Resources and Nutrition Laboratory, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand
  • 7 Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200438, China
  • 8 School of Sciences, Monash University Malaysia, 47500, Bandar Sunway, Selangor, Malaysia. song.beng.kah@monash.edu
  • 9 Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, 63105, USA. kolsen@wustl.edu
Nat Commun, 2024 Feb 21;15(1):1182.
PMID: 38383554 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-45447-0

Abstract

High reproductive compatibility between crops and their wild relatives can provide benefits for crop breeding but also poses risks for agricultural weed evolution. Weedy rice is a feral relative of rice that infests paddies and causes severe crop losses worldwide. In regions of tropical Asia where the wild progenitor of rice occurs, weedy rice could be influenced by hybridization with the wild species. Genomic analysis of this phenomenon has been very limited. Here we use whole genome sequence analyses of 217 wild, weedy and cultivated rice samples to show that wild rice hybridization has contributed substantially to the evolution of Southeast Asian weedy rice, with some strains acquiring weed-adaptive traits through introgression from the wild progenitor. Our study highlights how adaptive introgression from wild species can contribute to agricultural weed evolution, and it provides a case study of parallel evolution of weediness in independently-evolved strains of a weedy crop relative.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.