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Domestication through clandestine cultivation constrained genetic diversity in magic mushrooms relative to naturalized populations
Domestication through clandestine cultivation constrained genetic diversity in magic mushrooms relative to naturalized populations
Alistair R. McTaggart et al.
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Fungi that are edible or fermentative were domesticated through selective cultivation of their desired traits.
Domestication is often associated with inbreeding or selfing, which may fix traits other than those under se-
lection, and causes an overall decrease in heterozygosity. A hallucinogenic mushroom, Psilocybe cubensis,
was domesticated from its niche in livestock dung for production of psilocybin. It has caused accidental poi-
sonings since the 1940s in Australia, which is a population hypothesized to be introduced from an unknown
center of origin. We sequenced genomes of 38 isolates from Australia and compared them with 86 genomes
of commercially available cultivars to determine (1) whether P. cubensis was introduced to Australia, and (2)
how domestication has impacted commercial cultivars. Our analyses of genome-wide SNPs and single-copy
orthologs showed that the Australian population is naturalized, having recovered its effective population size
after a bottleneck when it was introduced, and it has maintained relatively high genetic diversity based on
measures of nucleotide and allelic diversity. In contrast, domesticated cultivars generally have low effective
population sizes and hallmarks of selfing and clonal propagation, including low genetic diversity, low hetero-
zygosity, high linkage disequilibrium, and low allelic diversity of mating-compatibility genes. Analyses of
kinship show that most cultivars are founded from related populations. Alleles in the psilocybin gene cluster
are identical across most cultivars of P. cubensis with low diversity across coding sequence; however,
unique allelic diversity in Australia and some cultivars may translate to differences in biosynthesis of psilocy-
bin and its analogs.
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