Wine grapes may have originated in western Asia

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Photo by Kym Ellis on Unsplash
Photo by Kym Ellis on Unsplash

Domesticated table grapes in western Asia combined with local wild relatives may have been the genetic beginning of the grapes we now use to make wine, international researchers say. With the origins of European wine grapes still contested, the researchers analysed the genomes of a common grapevine to try and find its ancestors. They say wine grapes likely originated from a single domestication event, most likely in the South Caucasus around Armenia and Turkey, before being interbred with various wild European varieties. Among the grapes we know now, the researchers say those in Italy and France tend to be the most genetically diverse.

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From: Springer Nature

Genetics: Origin of European wine grapes

European wine grapes may have originated from the hybridization of western Asian-domesticated table grapes and local wild relatives, suggests a paper published in Nature Communications. The findings reveal insights into the history and genetic ancestry of European wine grapes.

Grapes have been cultivated for nearly four millennia in the eastern Mediterranean and two millennia in western Europe. However, the origin of European wine grapes, including varieties such as Merlot, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Noir, is debated. Previous research has suggested that European wine grapes originated from the domestication of Europe’s own wild grape species, independent of domestication events in Western Asia.

Michele Morgante, Gabriele Di Gaspero and colleagues analyzed the genomes of 204 Vitis vinifera (common grape vine) to explore the origins of European wine grapes. The authors suggest that the grapes originated from a single domestication event in western Asia, most likely in the South Caucasus, followed by multiple rounds of inter-breeding with the European wild grape population. They also identified the genetic footprints for domestication and breeding selection, which determine the grapes used for today’s wine making. The authors observed similar levels of genetic diversity in wild grapes and in the varieties used for today’s wine making. Additionally, the findings suggest that Italy and France have the most genetic diversity among their cultivated grapevines of the European countries included in samples.

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Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Udine, Italy
Funder: This work was supported by FP7–IDEAS–ERC “Novabreed” (grant agreement no. 294780, M.M.), by the Italian Ministry of Agriculture (project Vigneto, M.M.), and by the European Regional Development Fund, Interreg Italy–Slovenia Programme 2007–2013 (grant no 081-3/2011, project VISO, G.D.G.).
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