Complete Resequencing of 40 Genomes Reveals Domestication Events and Genes in Silkworm (Bombyx)

The Taming of the Silkworm Silkworms, Bombyx mori, represent one of the few domesticated insects, having been domesticated over 10,000 years ago. Xia et al. (p. 433, published online 27 August) sequenced 29 domestic and 11 wild silkworm lines and identified genes that were most likely to be selected during domestication. These genes represent those that enhance silk production, reproduction, and growth. Furthermore, silkworms were probably only domesticated once from a large progenitor population, rather than on multiple occasions, as has been observed for other domesticated animals. Silkworm genomes show signatures of selection associated with domestication. A single–base pair resolution silkworm genetic variation map was constructed from 40 domesticated and wild silkworms, each sequenced to approximately threefold coverage, representing 99.88% of the genome. We identified ~16 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms, many indels, and structural variations. We find that the domesticated silkworms are clearly genetically differentiated from the wild ones, but they have maintained large levels of genetic variability, suggesting a short domestication event involving a large number of individuals. We also identified signals of selection at 354 candidate genes that may have been important during domestication, some of which have enriched expression in the silk gland, midgut, and testis. These data add to our understanding of the domestication processes and may have applications in devising pest control strategies and advancing the use of silkworms as efficient bioreactors.

Xun Xu | Ruiqiang Li | Cheng Lu | Yiran Guo | Zhonghuai Xiang | Ningjia He | Rasmus Nielsen | Ping Zhao | Daojun Cheng | Xingfu Zha | Tingcai Cheng | Huanming Yang | Jianjun Cao | Jian Wang | Guojie Zhang | Yan Zhou | Jing Zhao | Fangyin Dai | Jun Wang | Zhuo Li | Huisong Zheng | Dong Li | Dawei Li | Xuyang Yin | Huanming Yang | Jian Wang | Jun Wang | Songgang Li | R. Nielsen | Ruiqiang Li | Wei Fan | Jun Li | Yiran Guo | I. Hellmann | Yan Zhou | Zhuo Li | Xiuqing Zhang | T. Jiang | Huisong Zheng | W. Zeng | F. Dai | Dong Li | Ying Lin | Daojun Cheng | Q. Xia | Wen Wang | C. Ye | Cheng Lu | Z. Xiang | Zeyang Zhou | J. Zhao | Xun Xu | J. Jensen | C. Becquet | Jianjun Cao | Z. Xuan | Hui Liu | Chun Liu | Xuyang Yin | T. Cheng | Ze Zhang | Juan Wang | P. Zhao | X. Zha | G. Pan | Chunfeng Li | Yi-Hong Shen | Hanfu Xu | Ningjia He | Haojing Shao | Qingyou Xia | Chun Liu | Ze Zhang | Yingrui Li | Wei Fan | A. Zhao | Ines Hellmann | Chang Yu | Xiuqing Zhang | Haojing Shao | Chen Ye | Songgang Li | Jun Li | Wen Wang | Jingjing Li | Lan Jiang | Tao Jiang | Ying Lin | Dawei Li | Shiping Liu | Celine Becquet | Chunfeng Li | Guoqing Pan | Zeyang Zhou | Aichun Zhao | Zhaoling Xuan | Yihong Shen | Lan Jiang | Jeffrey Jensen | Si Tang | Hanfu Xu | Chang Yu | Hui Liu | Zhouhe Du | Wei Zeng | Ping Wu | Minhui Pan | Juan Wang | M. Pan | Shiping Liu | Guojie Zhang | Si Tang | P. Wu | Zhouhe Du | Yingrui Li | Jingjing Li | Céline Becquet | Ines Hellmann | Zhaoling Xuan | Tingcai Cheng | Tingcai Cheng

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