참고자료

[식량] 쌀 2번의 작물화와 2번의 잡초화, 미래의 시사점

어떻게 쌀은 두 번 작물화되었다가 두 번 잡초가 되었는가? 그리고 이것이 인류의 미래에
의미하는 바가 무엇인가?

세인트루이스 소재 워싱턴대학교 케네스 올슨 교수팀이 지난 1만년 동안 쌀이 아시아와
아프리카에서 2번 작물화되었으며, 2번 야생 잡초로 돌아가는 돌연변이를 겪었다는
연구결과를  [진화생물학회지] 최신호에 발표했습니다.

아시아와 아프리카에서 각각 독자적으로 일어난 이러한 변화는 평행진화(parallel evolution)
의 대표적인 사례라고 밝혔습니다.  평행진화란 서로 다른 혈통에서 유사한 적응이 일어난
것을 말합니다.

전세계에서 가장 많이 재배되는 쌀은 오리자 사티바(Oryza sativa)인데… 이 종은 1만년 전
남아시아의 잡초였던 야생벼 오리자 루피포곤’(Oryza rufipogon)에서 진화한 것입니다.

오리자 사티바(Oryza sativa)의 아종은 현재 한국, 중국, 일본에서 재배하고 있는 쌀인
자포니카(O.japonica)와 태국, 베트남, 인도 등 동남아사아에서 재배하고 있는 인디카
(O.indica) 등이 있습니다.

아프리카에서도 3천5백년 전에 야생 잡초였던 쌀이 작물이 되었습니다. 니제르강 유역의
농민들은 아프리카 야생종 벼인 바르티(O.barthii)를 재배하여 글라베리마(O.glaberrima)
라는 작물을 만들어냈습니다.

쌀의 미래와 관련하여 케네스 올슨 교수팀은 전통 영농방식에서 상업적 영농방식(공장식
영농방식)으로 전환됨에 따라 수확량이 감소될 수 있다는 우려를 제기했습니다.

우리나라의 전통적인 벼농사 방식처럼 아시아 지역에서는 벼를 묘판에 뿌려서 모내기를
할 수 있을 정도로 성장시킨 후 논에 옮겨 심는 영농방식을 취하기 때문에 잡초를 골라낼
수 있습니다.

그러나 현대의 상업적 영농방식(산업화된 농장)에서는 벼를 직접 논에 파종하는 직파법을
사용하기 때문에 잡초를 골라낼 기회가 없어서 수확이 최대 80% 정도 감소할  수 있다는
것입니다. (비용-효과 분석을 통해 인건비 등 제반 비용을 줄여서 이윤을 최대화하기 위해서
이러한 영농방식이 도입되었습니다.)

벼는 자가수분을 하기 때문에 상업적 영농방식을 택한 논에서는 벼와 잡초의 교잡으로 인해서
유전자 변이가 일어나게 되며… 그 결과 수확량 감소로 이어진다는 것입니다.

이와 더불어 이 논문에서는 언급하지 않았지만 유전자조작(GM) 쌀의 도입과 확산도
쌀과 인류의 미래에 유력한 변수가 될 것입니다.

======================

The role of Bh4 in parallel evolution of hull colour in domesticated and weedy rice

  1. C. C. Vigueira,
  2. W. Li,
  3. K. M. Olsen*

Article first published online: 17 JUL 2013

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 111/jeb.12171/abstract

Keywords:

  • de-domestication;
  • Oryza glaberrima ;
  • Oryza sativa ;
  • parallel evolution;
  • weedy rice

Abstract

The two independent domestication events in the genus Oryza that led to African and Asian rice offer an extremely useful system for studying the genetic basis of parallel evolution. This system is also characterized by parallel de-domestication events, with two genetically distinct weedy rice biotypes in the US derived from the Asian domesticate. One important trait that has been altered by rice domestication and de-domestication is hull colour. The wild progenitors of the two cultivated rice species have predominantly black-coloured hulls, as does one of the two U.S. weed biotypes; both cultivated species and one of the US weedy biotypes are characterized by straw-coloured hulls. Using Black hull 4 (Bh4) as a hull colour candidate gene, we examined DNA sequence variation at this locus to study the parallel evolution of hull colour variation in the domesticated and weedy rice system. We find that independent Bh4-coding mutations have arisen in African and Asian rice that are correlated with the straw hull phenotype, suggesting that the same gene is responsible for parallel trait evolution. For the U.S. weeds, Bh4 haplotype sequences support current hypotheses on the phylogenetic relationship between the two biotypes and domesticated Asian rice; straw hull weeds are most similar to indica crops, and black hull weeds are most similar to aus crops. Tests for selection indicate that Asian crops and straw hull weeds deviate from neutrality at this gene, suggesting possible selection on Bh4 during both rice domestication and de-domestication.

==========================================

How rice twice became a crop and twice became a weed — and what it means for the future

Weeds derived from a crop plant pose special challenges for modern farming

Contact: Diana Lutz
dlutz@wustl.edu
314-935-5272
Washington University in St. Louis

Public release date: 17-Jul-2013

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/wuis-hrt071713.php

 IMAGE: This image shows a sampling of weedy rice strains from an Arkansas rice field. Modern agriculture is radically changing the selection pressures acting on rice and weedy forms are evolving…

Click here for more information.
 

 
The evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould once asked whether the living world would be different “if the tape were played twice.” If there were a duplicate Earth evolving quietly beside ours, would we observe the emergence of creatures like ourselves and of plants and anaimals familiar to us, or would the cast of characters be entirely different?

It’s an intriguing question.

So far replicate Earths are in short supply, but cases of parallel evolution (the same trait evolving independently in related lineages) allow scientists to ask some of the same questsions.

One beautiful case of parallel evolution is the double domestication of rice in Africa as well as Asia, which was followed by its double “de-domestication,” or reversion to a wild form, all within the roughly 10,000 years since hunter-gatherers became settled farmers.

With the help of modern genetic technology and the resources of the International Rice GeneBank, which contains more than 112,000 different types of rice, evolutionary biologist Kenneth Olsen, PhD, associate professor of biology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, has been able to look back in time and ask whether the same mutations underlay the emergence of the same traits in both cultivated and weedy rice.

His latest findings, which take a close look at the genetics of hull color, appear in the July 17, 2013, online issue of the Journal of Evolutionary Biology.

The answers are interesting in their own right but also have practical importance because modern agriculture is radically changing the selection pressures acting on rice, the most important food crop for most of the world’s populations.

In response to these pressures, weedy forms that evolved from the crop forms are taking on traits more like those of wild ancestors. “They’re very aggressive competitors,” Olsen says, “and they’ve become a huge problem both here in the U.S. and all over the world.”

“In some parts of the world farmers have given up trying to grow rice and just market the weedy stuff that’s infested the fields as a health food,” he says. You sometimes see red rice from the Camargue, the delta region in southern France, in stores, he says. “Red rice is full of antioxidants, which tend also to be plant defense chemicals,” Olsen says, “but it is basically a weed.”

 

 IMAGE: A field in front of a Riceland Foods storage facility in Stittgart, Ark., is infested with weedy rice, which stands taller than the other rice plants. Riceland, an agricultural…

Click here for more information.
 

 

Double domestication

Worldwide, most of the cultivated rice is Asian rice,Oryza sativa which was bred from its wild progenitorOryza rufipogon in southern Asia within the past 10,000 years.

Whether the familiar indica and japonica subspecies of Asian rice also represent independent domestications is controversial. Most of the rice grown in the U.S. is japonica rice, Olsen says, which is genetically pretty different from indica rice, the rice grown in a lot of the tropics.

In any event there was a second unambiguous domestication event about 3,500 years ago when African cultivated rice (O. glaberrima) was bred from the African wild species O. barthii in the Niger River delta.

Scientists are now in a position to examine the genetic basis of both the Asian and African domestications, Olsen says. In a way it’s like being able to go back to check DNA fingerprints at the scene of a crime committed well before DNA testing first became available.

When a plant is domesticated, it acquires a suite of traits called the domestication syndrome that made it easier to grow as a crop. In rice, the syndrome includes loss of shattering (the seeds don’t break off the central grain stalk before harvest), increase in seed size, and loss of dormancy (the seeds all germinate at once and can be harvested at once).

Do the same genetic mutations underlie the emergence of these traits in both the Asian and African domestication events, or did domestication result from different mutations in the same genes, or even from mutations in different genes?

In a series of articles in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology and other journals, Olsen, postdoctoral researcher Cindy Vigueira, and their colleagues have shown that different mutations of the same genes underlie the loss of shattering, and the straw-colored hulls and white grains of both Asian and African cultivated rice.

So both Asian and African cultivated rice “broke” at roughly the same places under selection pressure from early farmers.

Double de-domestication

Like domestication, de-domestication, or evolution from the crop species of unpalatable weedy species that have many wild-like traits, also seems to have happened twice. One weedy strain resembles an Asian rice variety grown only in a small part of the Indian subcontient and the other strain resembles a rice grown in the tropics.

Because the weedy forms are closely related to rice varieties that were never grown in the U.S., they probably arrived as contaminants in grain stocks from Asia instead of evolving directly from the tropical japonica crops grown here.

The question, Olsen says, is whether crops reverted to wild forms by reversing the genetic changes that resulted in their domestication or through mutations that circumvented domestication in other ways.

At the genetic level the history of the weedy forms turns out to be messier than that of the crop forms.

For example, the weeds carry the crop form of the loss-of-shattering gene, which means that they branched off from the crops sometime after people selected for loss of shattering. The weedy forms shatter, but they’ve re-evolved this ability by some other, as yet unknown, pathway, he says.

 

 IMAGE: Washington University in St. Louis biologist Kenneth Olsena and postdoctoral research fellow Cindy Vigueira sample weedy rice in the WUSTL greenhouse for DNA extraction and analyses.

Click here for more information.
 

 

Weeds stealing crop genes

The most important part of this story, Olsen says, is that the genetic histories of the crops and the weeds are closely intertwined. This means the weedy forms can draw on both ancestral genes and crop genes as they respond to the selection pressures of modern agriculture.

Even though both weedy strains arose in Asia, he says, weedy rice became a problem in southeast Asia only in the last few decades. The reason is that rice seedlings were traditionally grown in paddies and then transplanted to the fields by hand. As they worked in the fields, farmers would recognize and pull weeds growing there.

But on industrialized farms, rice is sprouted directly in the field, so there’s no opportunity to remove weeds. Because the seedlings of both weedy and cultivated rice look alike, farmers often don’t realize they have a problem until the field is really infested.

Weedy infestations can drop the yield by as much as 80 percent, Olsen says. If a field is heavily infested, the farmer’s only recourse may be to abandon it.

In the U.S. weedy rice is increasingly combatted by growing herbicide resistant crop strains, Olsen says. In recent years more than a third of U.S. rice fields have been planted with herbicide-resistant rice.

But that places huge pressure on the weeds to acquire herbicide resistance by hook or by crook.

The mechanism of herbicide resistance that is bred into the crop is pretty simple, Olsen says. It’s basically a single amino-acid change in a particular gene, although newer varieties are getting a bit fancier and multiple genes may be involved. So it would be pretty easy for random mutations to confer resistance on the weeds.

The other possibility is that resistance genes will migrate from the crop to the weeds. Because both cultivated rice and weedy rice tend to self-fertilize, there hasn’t been a lot of gene flow going on in rice in general, Olsen says.

But the crop and the weeds—which are, after all, the same species – could easily hybridize now that selective pressure is favoring gene flow.

“We’re already seeing more and more hybridization occurring,” Olsen says. “It’s going to change the overall composition of the weeds in U.S. rice fields and presumably elsewhere in the world as well.”

 

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