The Plant Journal: Interspecific introgression patterns reveal the origins of worldwide cultivated bananas in New Guinea

Analysis of banana genomes has shown that cultivated bananas share common ancestors, originating in New Guinea and resulting from hybridizations between Musa acuminata and Musa schizocarpa species. These early hybrids then spread to Southeast Asia and diversified through hybridization with local subspecies/species of Musa, including a newly identified contributor and an important contributor yet to be discovered.

Martin Guillaume, Cottin Aurélien, Baurens Franc-Christophe, Labadie Karine, Hervouet Catherine, Salmon Frédéric, Paulo De La Reberdière Nilda, Van Den Houwe Ines, Sardos Julie, Aury Jean-Marc, D'Hont Angélique, Yahiaoui Nabila. 2023. Plant Journal , 17 p.

https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.16086 

Abstract

Hybridizations between Musa species and subspecies, enabled by their transport via human migration, were proposed to have played an important role in banana domestication. We exploited sequencing data of 226 Musaceae accessions, including wild and cultivated accessions, to characterize the inter(sub)specific hybridization pattern that gave rise to cultivated bananas. We identified 11 genetic pools that contributed to cultivars, including two contributors of unknown origin. Informative alleles for each of these genetic pools were pinpointed and used to obtain genome ancestry mosaics of accessions. Diploid and triploid cultivars had genome mosaics involving three up to possibly seven contributors. The simplest mosaics were found for some diploid cultivars from New Guinea, combining three contributors, i.e., banksii and zebrina representing Musa acuminata subspecies and, more unexpectedly, the New Guinean species Musa schizocarpa. Breakpoints of M. schizocarpa introgressions were found to be conserved between New Guinea cultivars and the other analyzed diploid and triploid cultivars. This suggests that plants bearing these M. schizocarpa introgressions were transported from New Guinea and gave rise to currently cultivated bananas. Many cultivars showed contrasted mosaics with predominant ancestry from their geographical origin across Southeast Asia to New Guinea. This revealed that further diversification occurred in different Southeast Asian regions through hybridization with other Musa (sub)species, including two unknown ancestors that we propose to be M. acuminata ssp. halabanensis and a yet to be characterized M. acuminata subspecies. These results highlighted a dynamic crop formation process that was initiated in New Guinea, with subsequent diversification throughout Southeast Asia.

Published: 02/03/2023