The Genomic Signature of Crop-Wild Introgression in Maize
Matthew B. Hufford, Pesach Lubinksy, Tanja Pyh\"aj\"arvi, Michael T., Devengenzo, Norman C. Ellstrand, and Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra

TL;DR
This study investigates genome-wide introgression between maize and its wild relative mexicana, revealing widespread gene flow, resistance near key loci, and potential adaptive allele incorporation into maize during highland expansion.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive genome-wide analysis of maize-mexicana introgression, highlighting regions resistant to gene flow and evidence of adaptive allele transfer.
Findings
Widespread introgression detected in both directions.
Resistance to introgression near known loci.
Evidence of adaptive mexicana alleles in maize.
Abstract
The evolutionary significance of hybridization and subsequent introgression has long been appreciated, but evaluation of the genome-wide effects of these phenomena has only recently become possible. Crop-wild study systems represent ideal opportunities to examine evolution through hybridization. For example, maize and the conspecific wild teosinte Zea mays ssp. mexicana, (hereafter, mexicana) are known to hybridize in the fields of highland Mexico. Despite widespread evidence of gene flow, maize and mexicana maintain distinct morphologies and have done so in sympatry for thousands of years. Neither the genomic extent nor the evolutionary importance of introgression between these taxa is understood. In this study we assessed patterns of genome-wide introgression based on 39,029 single nucleotide polymorphisms genotyped in 189 individuals from nine sympatric maize-mexicana populations and…
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