IBAM   22618
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA AGRICOLA DE MENDOZA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
capítulos de libros
Título:
The history written in the grapevine genome
Autor/es:
MARTINEZ-ZAPATER, JM; LIJAVETZKY, D; FERNANDEZ, L; SANTANA, JC; IBANEZ, J
Libro:
PATRIMONIO CULTURAL DE LA VID y EL VINO-VINE AND WINE CULTURAL HERITAGE
Editorial:
UAM Ediciones
Referencias:
Año: 2013; p. 1 - 408
Resumen:
Genetic and genomic information available in grapevine in combination with the analyses of archaeological remains can help to shed light on questions regarding its domestication process, such as the number and location of domestication events, the temporal sequence of the domestication process or the identification of some of the genes that drove their cultivar diversification. the availa - ble genetic evidence suggests the existence of limited grapevine domestication from its wild ancestor Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris, with almost no reduction in genetic variation due to the extensive use of vegetative multiplication. genetic evidence also suggests that domestication would have taken place in the eastern end of the distribution of the wild ancestor, although both nuclear and chloroplast markers point out the existence of introgression or secondary domestication events from western wild populations into western cultivars. the relevance of vegetative multiplication is also pointed out by the large accumulation of somatic mutations selected as drivers of phenotypic diversification. however, spontaneous hybridizations among cultivars are in the basis of the origin of current cultivars and cultivar families associated to different geographic regions.