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Dive into the research topics where Taihachi Kawahara is active.

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Featured researches published by Taihachi Kawahara.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2007

The structure of wild and domesticated emmer wheat populations, gene flow between them, and the site of emmer domestication

Ming-Cheng Luo; Z.-L. Yang; Frank M. You; Taihachi Kawahara; J. G. Waines; Jan Dvorak

The domestication of emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum spp. dicoccoides, genomes BBAA) was one of the key events during the emergence of agriculture in southwestern Asia, and was a prerequisite for the evolution of durum and common wheat. Single- and multilocus genotypes based on restriction fragment length polymorphism at 131 loci were analyzed to describe the structure of populations of wild and domesticated emmer and to generate a picture of emmer domestication and its subsequent diffusion across Asia, Europe and Africa. Wild emmer consists of two populations, southern and northern, each further subdivided. Domesticated emmer mirrors the geographic subdivision of wild emmer into the northern and southern populations and also shows an additional structure in both regions. Gene flow between wild and domesticated emmer occurred across the entire area of wild emmer distribution. Emmer was likely domesticated in the Diyarbakir region in southeastern Turkey, which was followed by subsequent hybridization and introgression from wild to domesticated emmer in southern Levant. A less likely scenario is that emmer was domesticated independently in the Diyarbakir region and southern Levant, and the Levantine genepool was absorbed into the genepool of domesticated emmer diffusing from southeastern Turkey. Durum wheat is closely related to domesticated emmer in the eastern Mediterranean and likely originated there.


American Journal of Botany | 2005

Intra- and interspecific phylogenetic relationships among diploid Triticum-Aegilops species (Poaceae) based on base-pair substitutions, indels, and microsatellites in chloroplast noncoding sequences

Kyoko Yamane; Taihachi Kawahara

This study analyzes intra- and interspecific variation in chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) in diploid Triticum-Aegilops species. This analysis focused on DNA sequence variation in noncoding regions of cpDNA, which included base-pair substitutions, insertion/deletions (indels, 50 loci pooled), microsatellites (7 loci pooled), and inversions. Nine of 13 Triticum-Aegilops species were successfully identified and genotyped using these data. Sixty-two haplotypes were detected in 115 accessions of 13 diploid species. Because of the large number of characters examined, novel deep relationships within and among Triticum-Aegilops species could be identified and evaluated. Phylogenetic trees for the genus Triticum-Aegilops were constructed with Hordeum vulgare and Dasypyrum villosum as outgroups, and the results were compared to previous studies. These data support the following inferences: (1) Aegilops species should be included in Triticum; (2) groups D, T, M, N, U, and section Sitopsis (except Ae. speltoides) underwent speciation concurrently, but most diploid species evolved independently; (3) Ae. mutica does not occupy a basal position in Triticum-Aegilops; (4) Ae. speltoides is in a basal position and differs significantly from other Sitopsis species; (5) Ae. caudata is polyphyletic in all trees; (6) the genus Aegilops is paraphyletic with Secale.


Molecular Ecology | 2010

Population structure of wild wheat D‐genome progenitor Aegilops tauschii Coss.: implications for intraspecific lineage diversification and evolution of common wheat

Nobuyuki Mizuno; Masanori Yamasaki; Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Taihachi Kawahara; Shigeo Takumi

Aegilops tauschii Coss. is the D‐genome progenitor of hexaploid wheat. Aegilops tauschii, a wild diploid species, has a wide natural species range in central Eurasia, spreading from Turkey to western China. Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis using a total of 122 accessions of Ae. tauschii was conducted to clarify the population structure of this widespread wild wheat species. Phylogenetic and principal component analyses revealed two major lineages in Ae. tauschii. Bayesian population structure analyses based on the AFLP data showed that lineages one (L1) and two (L2) were respectively significantly divided into six and three sublineages. Only four out of the six L1 sublineages were diverged from those of western habitats in the Transcaucasia and northern Iran region to eastern habitats such as Pakistan and Afghanistan. Other sublineages including L2 were distributed to a limited extent in the western region. Subspecies strangulata seemed to be differentiated in one sublineage of L2. Among three major haplogroups (HG7, HG9 and HG16) previously identified in the Ae. tauschii population based on chloroplast variation, HG7 accessions were widely distributed to both L1 and L2, HG9 accessions were restricted to L2, and HG16 accessions belonged to L1, suggesting that HG9 and HG16 were formed from HG7 after divergence of the first two lineages of the nuclear genome. These results on the population structure of Ae. tauschii and the genealogical relationship among Ae. tauschii accessions should provide important agricultural and evolutionary knowledge on genetic resources and conservation of natural genetic diversity.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2007

Natural variation for fertile triploid F1 hybrid formation in allohexaploid wheat speciation.

Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Shigeo Takumi; Taihachi Kawahara

The tempo, mode, and geography of allopolyploid speciation are influenced by natural variation in the ability of parental species to express postzygotic reproductive phenotypes that affect hybrid fertility. To shed light on the impact of such natural variations, we used allohexaploid Triticum aestivum wheats’ evolution as a model and analyzed the geographic and phylogenetic distributions of Aegilops tauschii (diploid progenitor) accessions involved in the expression of abnormality and fertility in triploid F1 hybrids with Triticum turgidum (tetraploid progenitor). Artificial-cross experiments and chloroplast-DNA-based evolutionary analyses showed that hybrid-abnormality-causing accessions had limited geographic and phylogenetic distributions, indicative that postzygotic hybridization barriers are underdeveloped between these species. In contrast, accessions that are involved with fertile triploid F1 hybrid formation have wide geographic and phylogenetic distributions, indicative of a deep evolutionary origin. Wide-spread hybrid-fertilizing accessions support the theory that T. aestivum speciation occurred at multiple sites within the species range of Ae. tauschii, in which existing conditions enabled natural hybridization with T. turgidum. Implications of our findings on how natural variation in the ability of Ae. tauschii to express those postzygotic reproductive phenotypes diversified and contributed to the speciation of T. aestivum are discussed.


Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution | 2006

Aegilops tauschii: Genetic Variation in Iran

Alexander Ju. Dudnikov; Taihachi Kawahara

All the 79 Aegilops tauschii Coss. accessions of Iranian origin from Prof. Kihara’s collection were analyzed electrophoretically. Of 23 enzyme-encoding loci studied, 11 were polymorphic. In Iran Ae. tauschii is presented by ssp. tauschii and ssp. strangulata which distinctly differ genetically, morphologically and ecologically. Variation patterns of low polymorphic locus Aco2 and highly polymorphic Ep are similar in both subspecies. In contrast, variation of Acph1, Ak, Est2, Est5, Got1, Got2, Got3 and Lap is a set of diverse patterns which markedly differ between subspecies and natural regions also, implying that natural selection is involved.


Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution | 2007

Phylogenetic relationships among cultivated types of Brassica rapa L. em. Metzg. as revealed by AFLP analysis

Shohei Takuno; Taihachi Kawahara; Ohmi Ohnishi

The cultivated types of Brassica rapa L. em. Metzg. consist of morphologically distinct subspecies such as turnip, turnip rape, Chinese cabbage, pak choi and pot herb mustard which are classified as ssp. rapa, ssp. oleifera, ssp. pekinensis, ssp. chinensis and ssp. nipposinica (syn. ssp. japonica), respectively. We attempted to elucidate the phylogenetic relationships among the cultivated types of B. rapa. Thirty-two accessions from the Eurasian Continent were analyzed using AFLP markers with a cultivar of B. oleracea as an outgroup. In total, 455 bands were detected in the ingroup and 392 (86.6%) were polymorphic. The Neighbor-Joining tree based on the AFLP markers indicated that the accessions of B. rapa were congregated into two groups according to geographic origin. One group consisted of ssp. rapa and ssp. oleifera of Europe and Central Asia and the other included all the subspecies of East Asia. Our results suggest that cultivars from East Asia were probably derived from a primitive cultivated type, which originated in Europe or in Central Asia and migrated to East Asia. This primitive cultivated type was probably a common ancestor of ssp. rapa and ssp. oleifera. The Neighbor-Joining tree also shows that leafy vegetables in East Asia such as ssp. pekinensis, ssp. chinensis and ssp. nipposinica were differentiated several times from the distinct cultivars of ssp. oleifera in East Asia.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2001

The Au family, a novel short interspersed element (SINE) from Aegilops umbellulata

Y. Yasui; Shuhei Nasuda; Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Taihachi Kawahara

Abstract A novel plant short interspersed nuclear element (SINE) was identified in the second intron of the acetyl CoA carboxylase gene of Aegilops umbellulata which has been designated ”Au”, for the host species in which it was discovered. Au elements have a tRNA-related region, direct flanking repeats, and a short stretch of T at the 3′ end, which are features common to Au and previously characterized SINEs. Au elements are detected in the genomes of several monocots and dicots by DNA dot hybridization and are also found in the tobacco genome by database searching. Au elements are present at an especially high copy number (approximately 104 copies per haploid genome) in wheat and Ae. umbellulata. This suggests a recent amplification of Au in the Triticum and Aegilops species. In situ hybridization revealed a dispersed distribution of Au elements on wheat chromosomes. Au elements were amplified by PCR from monocot and dicot species and the phylogenetic relationships among Au elements were inferred. This phylogenetic analysis suggests amplification of Au elements in a manner consistent with the retrotransposon model for SINE dispersion. The high copy number of Au elements and their dispersed distribution in wheat are desirable characteristics for a molecular marker system in this important species.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Genetic basis for spontaneous hybrid genome doubling during allopolyploid speciation of common wheat shown by natural variation analyses of the paternal species.

Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Shuhei Nasuda; Yasuyo Ashida; Miyuki Nitta; Hisashi Tsujimoto; Shigeo Takumi; Taihachi Kawahara

The complex process of allopolyploid speciation includes various mechanisms ranging from species crosses and hybrid genome doubling to genome alterations and the establishment of new allopolyploids as persisting natural entities. Currently, little is known about the genetic mechanisms that underlie hybrid genome doubling, despite the fact that natural allopolyploid formation is highly dependent on this phenomenon. We examined the genetic basis for the spontaneous genome doubling of triploid F1 hybrids between the direct ancestors of allohexaploid common wheat (Triticum aestivum L., AABBDD genome), namely Triticum turgidum L. (AABB genome) and Aegilops tauschii Coss. (DD genome). An Ae. tauschii intraspecific lineage that is closely related to the D genome of common wheat was identified by population-based analysis. Two representative accessions, one that produces a high-genome-doubling-frequency hybrid when crossed with a T . turgidum cultivar and the other that produces a low-genome-doubling-frequency hybrid with the same cultivar, were chosen from that lineage for further analyses. A series of investigations including fertility analysis, immunostaining, and quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis showed that (1) production of functional unreduced gametes through nonreductional meiosis is an early step key to successful hybrid genome doubling, (2) first division restitution is one of the cytological mechanisms that cause meiotic nonreduction during the production of functional male unreduced gametes, and (3) six QTLs in the Ae . tauschii genome, most of which likely regulate nonreductional meiosis and its subsequent gamete production processes, are involved in hybrid genome doubling. Interlineage comparisons of Ae . tauschii ’s ability to cause hybrid genome doubling suggested an evolutionary model for the natural variation pattern of the trait in which non-deleterious mutations in six QTLs may have important roles. The findings of this study demonstrated that the genetic mechanisms for hybrid genome doubling could be studied based on the intrinsic natural variation that exists in the parental species.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005

Genealogical use of chloroplast DNA variation for intraspecific studies of Aegilops tauschii Coss.

Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Naoki Mori; Taihachi Kawahara

Intraspecific patterns of chloroplast DNA variation was studied in Aegilops tauschii Coss., the D-genome progenitor of bread wheat. Nucleotide sequences of ten chloroplast microsatellite loci were analyzed for 63 accessions that cover the central part of the species distribution. As is often the case with nuclear microsatellites, those of chloroplasts of Ae. tauschii bear complex mutations. Several types of mutations other than change in the microsatellite repeat number were found, including base substitutions and length mutations in flanking regions. In total, eight mutations were present in the flanking regions of four loci. Most mutations in the flanking regions of microsatellite repeats are associated with biallelic polymorphisms. Phylogeographic analyses showed that such biallelic polymorphisms are useful to investigate intraspecific patterns of monophyletic lineage divergence. In contrast, most microsatellite repeat sites are multiallelic, variable within intraspecific lineages, and useful to compare degrees of genetic diversity between lineages. These findings show that the chloroplast genome harbors evolutionary variations informative for intraspecific studies of Ae. tauschii and can be analyzed by genealogical approaches.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2000

Fixation of translocation 2A.4B infers the monophyletic origin of Ethiopian tetraploid wheat.

Taihachi Kawahara; Shin Taketa

Abstract Analysis of structural chromosomal polymorphism revealed the presence of a previously reported 2A·4B translocation common to all 15 strains of Ethiopian tetraploid wheat examined. Using the C-banding technique, we found two new translocations,T1B·6B and T5B·6B, and a pericentric inversion of chromosome 5A. The C-banding pattern indicated that in all three translocations the breakpoint was located in the centromeric region. Sequential N-banding and genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) confirmed the location of the breakpoint of translocation 2A·4B, and revealed that the breakpoint of another known translocation, 2A-2B, was in the proximal region of 2BL. The fixation of the 2A·4B translocation indicates the monophyletic origin of Ethiopian tetraploid wheat and the presence of a very severe bottleneck effect during its dispersal.

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Yoshihiro Matsuoka

Fukui Prefectural University

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Hisashi Tsujimoto

Kihara Institute for Biological Research

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