Diversity and domestication in the genus Panicum (Poaceae) Harriet V. Hunt 1, Mim A. Bower 1, Christopher J. Howe 2 and Martin K. Jones 3 1 McDonald Institute.

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Diversity and domestication in the genus Panicum (Poaceae) Harriet V. Hunt 1, Mim A. Bower 1, Christopher J. Howe 2 and Martin K. Jones 3 1 McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, CAMBRIDGE CB2 3ER 2 Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Downing Site, Tennis Court Road, CAMBRIDGE CB2 1QW 3 Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, CAMBRIDGE CB2 3DZ Introduction Panicum is one of the largest grass genera, with over 100 species distributed throughout the tropical and temperate regions of the Old and New Worlds. A number of these are cultivated for their grain, or harvested from the wild: P. miliaceum (broomcorn or proso millet), P. sumatrense (little millet or samai), P. sonorum (sauwi millet), P. atrosanguineum, P. hippothrix, P. trypheron, P. turgidum and others. Broomcorn millet, Panicum miliaceum, appears early in the archaeobotanical record and was an important cereal in prehistory, but its evolutionary and geographical origins remain uncertain. This project is analysing patterns of genus- and species-level genetic diversity to illuminate the domestication history of P. miliaceum. Acknowledgements Funding: The Leverhulme Trust, The Wellcome Trust Plant material: Vavilov Institute, St Petersburg, Russia; Millennium Seed Bank Project, RBG Kew; Dorian Fuller, Institute of Archaeology, University College London; David Brenner, Iowa State University Plant cultivation: Alexander Goodall, Cambridge Botanic Garden AFLP analysis: Susan Freeman, NIAB References a MK Jones (2004) Ch. 10 in Traces of Ancestry: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew (ed. MK Jones). McDonald Institute Monographs b SS Aliscioni et al. (2003) American Journal of Botany 90: Panicum miliaceum L. – an ancient grain crop Broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) shows an unusual geographical pattern in the archaeobotanical record (Fig. 1). It appears in the 7 th millennium BC in northern China, and by the 6 th millennium BC in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus. In later prehistory, broomcorn millet agriculture spread to Central and Western Europe, to South Asia and to Japan, although it did not reach the Near Eastern Fertile Crescent until the 1 st millennium BC, and is absent from the archaeobotanical record of Central Asia. Today, Panicum miliaceum cultivation for human consumption is still significant in Russia, India and China. It is a short-lived crop with low water and nutrient requirements, making it suitable for cultivation on land that is otherwise marginal for agriculture. 7 th – 6 th mill. BC 6 th – 5 th mill. BC 1 st mill. BC 5 th – 4 th mill. BC 3 rd mill. BC 2 nd mill. BC Fig. 1. Panicum miliaceum in the archaeobotanic al reords Tracking the geography of domestication with genetic markers Three possible hypotheses can account for the distribution of early Panicum finds a : A single domestication in northern China, followed by extremely rapid westward spread A single domestication in northern China some millennia earlier than current dates suggest, followed by a westward spread at rates comparable to those of other crops Two or more domestications, spread across the Eurasian steppe This project is developing genetic markers to map diversity in broomcorn millet landraces and test these hypotheses. Early results indicate P. miliaceum harbours low genetic diversity in both nuclear and chloroplast genomes. Current work is focusing on AFLPs (Fig. 2) and SNPs in introns of single-copy nuclear genes, specifically FLO/LFY orthologs and the waxy locus. Fig. 2. AFLP gel: 3 accessions of P. miliaceum analysed using 16 selective primer combinations. Diversity generally low, but some polymorphic loci are present. Towards a Eurasian Panicum phylogeny The phylogenetic relationships of Eurasian Panicum species are currently unknown, and the wild ancestor of P. milaceum, if it still exists, has not been conclusively identified. We are sequencing the chloroplast ndhF gene in Old World species (Fig. 3), to complement existing phylogenetic studies of New World Panicum b. Fig. 3. (L-R) P. capillare, P. dichotomiflorum and P. bisulcatum – widespread wild species in Asia Chromosome numbers in Panicum indicate that polyploidy is common. Future work should extend the phylogenetic study to nuclear genes, to assess evidence for reticulate evolution through congruence of tree topologies.