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Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication

Iconographic evidence from Egypt suggests that watermelon pulp was consumed there as a dessert by 4,360 BP. Earlier archaeobotanical evidence comes from seeds from Neolithic settlements in Libya, but whether these were watermelons with sweet pulp or other forms is unknown. We generated genome sequen...

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Autores principales: Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A, Tusso, Sergio, Przelomska, Natalia A S, Wu, Shan, Ryan, Philippa, Nesbitt, Mark, Silber, Martina V, Preick, Michaela, Fei, Zhangjun, Hofreiter, Michael, Chomicki, Guillaume, Renner, Susanne S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9387916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35907246
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac168
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author Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A
Tusso, Sergio
Przelomska, Natalia A S
Wu, Shan
Ryan, Philippa
Nesbitt, Mark
Silber, Martina V
Preick, Michaela
Fei, Zhangjun
Hofreiter, Michael
Chomicki, Guillaume
Renner, Susanne S
author_facet Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A
Tusso, Sergio
Przelomska, Natalia A S
Wu, Shan
Ryan, Philippa
Nesbitt, Mark
Silber, Martina V
Preick, Michaela
Fei, Zhangjun
Hofreiter, Michael
Chomicki, Guillaume
Renner, Susanne S
author_sort Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A
collection PubMed
description Iconographic evidence from Egypt suggests that watermelon pulp was consumed there as a dessert by 4,360 BP. Earlier archaeobotanical evidence comes from seeds from Neolithic settlements in Libya, but whether these were watermelons with sweet pulp or other forms is unknown. We generated genome sequences from 6,000- and 3,300-year-old seeds from Libya and Sudan, and from worldwide herbarium collections made between 1824 and 2019, and analyzed these data together with resequenced genomes from important germplasm collections for a total of 131 accessions. Phylogenomic and population-genomic analyses reveal that (1) much of the nuclear genome of both ancient seeds is traceable to West African seed-use “egusi-type” watermelon (Citrullus mucosospermus) rather than domesticated pulp-use watermelon (Citrullus lanatus ssp. vulgaris); (2) the 6,000-year-old watermelon likely had bitter pulp and greenish-white flesh as today found in C. mucosospermus, given alleles in the bitterness regulators ClBT and in the red color marker LYCB; and (3) both ancient genomes showed admixture from C. mucosospermus, C. lanatus ssp. cordophanus, C. lanatus ssp. vulgaris, and even South African Citrullus amarus, and evident introgression between the Libyan seed (UMB-6) and populations of C. lanatus. An unexpected new insight is that Citrullus appears to have initially been collected or cultivated for its seeds, not its flesh, consistent with seed damage patterns induced by human teeth in the oldest Libyan material.
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spelling pubmed-93879162022-08-19 Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A Tusso, Sergio Przelomska, Natalia A S Wu, Shan Ryan, Philippa Nesbitt, Mark Silber, Martina V Preick, Michaela Fei, Zhangjun Hofreiter, Michael Chomicki, Guillaume Renner, Susanne S Mol Biol Evol Discoveries Iconographic evidence from Egypt suggests that watermelon pulp was consumed there as a dessert by 4,360 BP. Earlier archaeobotanical evidence comes from seeds from Neolithic settlements in Libya, but whether these were watermelons with sweet pulp or other forms is unknown. We generated genome sequences from 6,000- and 3,300-year-old seeds from Libya and Sudan, and from worldwide herbarium collections made between 1824 and 2019, and analyzed these data together with resequenced genomes from important germplasm collections for a total of 131 accessions. Phylogenomic and population-genomic analyses reveal that (1) much of the nuclear genome of both ancient seeds is traceable to West African seed-use “egusi-type” watermelon (Citrullus mucosospermus) rather than domesticated pulp-use watermelon (Citrullus lanatus ssp. vulgaris); (2) the 6,000-year-old watermelon likely had bitter pulp and greenish-white flesh as today found in C. mucosospermus, given alleles in the bitterness regulators ClBT and in the red color marker LYCB; and (3) both ancient genomes showed admixture from C. mucosospermus, C. lanatus ssp. cordophanus, C. lanatus ssp. vulgaris, and even South African Citrullus amarus, and evident introgression between the Libyan seed (UMB-6) and populations of C. lanatus. An unexpected new insight is that Citrullus appears to have initially been collected or cultivated for its seeds, not its flesh, consistent with seed damage patterns induced by human teeth in the oldest Libyan material. Oxford University Press 2022-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9387916/ /pubmed/35907246 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac168 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Discoveries
Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A
Tusso, Sergio
Przelomska, Natalia A S
Wu, Shan
Ryan, Philippa
Nesbitt, Mark
Silber, Martina V
Preick, Michaela
Fei, Zhangjun
Hofreiter, Michael
Chomicki, Guillaume
Renner, Susanne S
Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title_full Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title_fullStr Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title_full_unstemmed Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title_short Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication
title_sort genome sequencing of up to 6,000-year-old citrullus seeds reveals use of a bitter-fleshed species prior to watermelon domestication
topic Discoveries
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9387916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35907246
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac168
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