eprintid: 9543 rev_number: 15 eprint_status: archive userid: 1305 dir: disk0/00/00/95/43 datestamp: 2016-06-07 10:28:38 lastmod: 2016-10-21 09:39:29 status_changed: 2016-06-07 10:28:38 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Penmetsa, R V creators_name: Carrasquilla-Garcia, N creators_name: Bergmann, E M creators_name: Vance, L creators_name: Castro, B creators_name: Kassa, M T creators_name: Sarma, B K creators_name: Datta, S creators_name: Farmer, A D creators_name: Baek, J M creators_name: Coyne, C J creators_name: Varshney, R K creators_name: Wettberg, E J B V creators_name: Cook, D R icrisatcreators_name: Varshney, R K affiliation: Department of Plant Pathology, University of California (Davis) affiliation: Department of Mycology and Plant Pathology, Banaras Hindu University (Varanasi) affiliation: Indian Institute of Pulses Research (Kanpur) affiliation: National Center for Genome Resources (Santa Fe) affiliation: USDA-ARS, Western Regional Plant Introduction Station, Washington State University (Pullman) affiliation: ICRISAT (Patancheru) affiliation: Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University (Miami) affiliation: Kushlan Institute for Tropical Science, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden (Coral Gables) country: USA country: India title: Multiple post-domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification-associated transcription factor ispublished: pub subjects: s1.1 subjects: s2.10 subjects: s2.13 divisions: D3 crps: crp1.5 full_text_status: public keywords: Chickpea, Basic helix–loop–helix (bHLH) transcription factor, Chickpea B locus, Cicerarietinum, Diversification, Domestication, Legume ortholog, Mendel’s A locus, Genetic analyses, Plant genotypes, Legumes, Kabuli chickpea note: This work was supported by the following awards: National Science Foundation DBI-0605251 to D.R.C.; National Science Foundation IOS-0965531 to D.R.C. and R.K.V.; United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Specific Cooperative Agreement no. 58-5348-1-220 to D.R.C. and R.V.P. We thank David L. Remington and Justen B. Whittall for critical reading of earlier drafts of the manuscript, and George Vandemark for kindly providing CRIL2 and CRIL7 populations. abstract: Crop domestication and subsequent diversification represent adaptations to human-built environments and offer insights into the evolutionary forces that shape phenotypic diversity. Chickpea (Cicer arietinum), a widely cultivated food legume, was domesticated in the Fertile Crescent together with several other so-called founder crops (Zohary et al., 2012). This is evidenced by the Neolithic archeological record (Tanno & Wilcox, 2006) and the prevalence of crop wild relatives in the eastern Mediterranean, particularly Cicer reticulatum, the wild annual Cicer species from which the cultigen is derived... date: 2016-05-19 date_type: published publication: New Phytologist publisher: Wiley pagerange: 01-12 id_number: 10.1111/nph.14010 refereed: TRUE issn: 0028-646X official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.14010 related_url_url: https://scholar.google.co.in/scholar?hl=en&q=Multiple+post-domestication+origins+of+kabuli+chickpea+through+allelic+variation+in+a+diversification-associated+transcription+factor&btnG= related_url_type: pub citation: Penmetsa, R V and Carrasquilla-Garcia, N and Bergmann, E M and Vance, L and Castro, B and Kassa, M T and Sarma, B K and Datta, S and Farmer, A D and Baek, J M and Coyne, C J and Varshney, R K and Wettberg, E J B V and Cook, D R (2016) Multiple post-domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification-associated transcription factor. New Phytologist. 01-12. ISSN 0028-646X document_url: http://oar.icrisat.org/9543/1/Penmetsa_et_al-2016-New_Phytologist.pdf