Comparative and Functional Genomics
Volume 5 (2004), Issue 3, Pages 281-284
doi:10.1002/cfg.395
Conference review
On the Tetraploid Origin of the Maize Genome
Zuzana Swigonova,
1 Jinsheng Lai,
1 Jianxin Ma,
2,3 Wusirika Ramakrishna,
2,4 Victor Llaca,
1,5 Jeffrey L. Bennetzen,
2,3 and
Joachim Messing1
1Waksman Institute of Microbiology, Rutgers University, 190 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway 08854-8020, NJ, USA
2Department of Biological Sciences and Genetics Program, West Lafayette 47907-2072, IN, USA
3Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens 30602, GA, USA
4Department of Biological Sciences, Michigan Tech University, 740 DOW, 1400 Townsend Drive, 49931, MI, USA
5Analytical and Genomic Technologies, Crop Genetics R & D, DuPont Agriculture & Nutrition, Wilmington 19880-0353, DE, USA
Received 26 January 2004; Revised 29 January 2004; Accepted 3 February 2004
Copyright © 2004 Hindawi Publishing Corporation. This is an open access article distributed under the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Data from cytological and genetic mapping studies suggest that maize arose as
a tetraploid. Two previous studies investigating the most likely mode of maize
origin arrived at different conclusions. Gaut and Doebley [7] proposed a segmental
allotetraploid origin of the maize genome and estimated that the two maize
progenitors diverged at 20.5 million years ago (mya). In a similar study, using larger
data set, Brendel and colleagues (quoted in [8]) suggested a single genome duplication
at 16 mya. One of the key components of such analyses is to examine sequence
divergence among strictly orthologous genes. In order to identify such genes, Lai
and colleagues [10] sequenced five duplicated chromosomal regions from the maize
genome and the orthologous counterparts from the sorghum genome. They also
identified the orthologous regions in rice. Using positional information of genetic
components, they identified 11 orthologous genes across the two duplicated regions
of maize, and the sorghum and rice regions. Swigonova et al. [12] analyzed the 11
orthologues, and showed that all five maize chromosomal regions duplicated at the
same time, supporting a tetraploid origin of maize, and that the two maize progenitors
diverged from each other at about the same time as each of them diverged from
sorghum, about 11.9 mya.