scholarly journals Constraining the timing of whole genome duplication in plant evolutionary history

2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1858) ◽  
pp. 20170912 ◽  
Author(s):  
James W. Clark ◽  
Philip C. J. Donoghue

Whole genome duplication (WGD) has occurred in many lineages within the tree of life and is invariably invoked as causal to evolutionary innovation, increased diversity, and extinction resistance. Testing such hypotheses is problematic, not least since the timing of WGD events has proven hard to constrain. Here we show that WGD events can be dated through molecular clock analysis of concatenated gene families, calibrated using fossil evidence for the ages of species divergences that bracket WGD events. We apply this approach to dating the two major genome duplication events shared by all seed plants ( ζ ) and flowering plants ( ɛ ), estimating the seed plant WGD event at 399–381 Ma, and the angiosperm WGD event at 319–297 Ma. These events thus took place early in the stem of both lineages, precluding hypotheses of WGD conferring extinction resistance, driving dramatic increases in innovation and diversity, but corroborating and qualifying the more permissive hypothesis of a ‘lag-time’ in realizing the effects of WGD in plant evolution.

Genetics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 156 (3) ◽  
pp. 1249-1257
Author(s):  
Ilya Ruvinsky ◽  
Lee M Silver ◽  
Jeremy J Gibson-Brown

Abstract The duplication of preexisting genes has played a major role in evolution. To understand the evolution of genetic complexity it is important to reconstruct the phylogenetic history of the genome. A widely held view suggests that the vertebrate genome evolved via two successive rounds of whole-genome duplication. To test this model we have isolated seven new T-box genes from the primitive chordate amphioxus. We find that each amphioxus gene generally corresponds to two or three vertebrate counterparts. A phylogenetic analysis of these genes supports the idea that a single whole-genome duplication took place early in vertebrate evolution, but cannot exclude the possibility that a second duplication later took place. The origin of additional paralogs evident in this and other gene families could be the result of subsequent, smaller-scale chromosomal duplications. Our findings highlight the importance of amphioxus as a key organism for understanding evolution of the vertebrate genome.


Author(s):  
Conghui Liu ◽  
Yuwei Ren ◽  
Zaiyuan Li ◽  
Qi Hu ◽  
Lijuan Yin ◽  
...  

AbstractWhole-genome duplication (WGD) has been observed across a wide variety of eukaryotic groups, contributing to evolutionary diversity and environmental adaptability. Mollusks are the second largest group of animals, and are among the organisms that have successfully adapted to the nonmarine realm through aquatic-terrestrial (A-T) transition, and no comprehensive research on WGD has been reported in this group. To explore WGD and the A-T transition in Mollusca, we assembled a chromosome-level reference genome for the giant African snail Achatina immaculata, a global invasive species, and compared the genomes of two giant African snails (A. immaculata and Achatina fulica) to the other available mollusk genomes. The chromosome-level macrosynteny, colinearity blocks, Ks peak and Hox gene clusters collectively suggested the occurrence of a WGD event shared by A. immaculata and A. fulica. The estimated timing of this WGD event (∼70 MYA) was close to the speciation age of the Sigmurethra-Orthurethra (within Stylommatophora) lineage and the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) mass extinction, indicating that the WGD reported herein may have been a common event shared by all Sigmurethra-Orthurethra species and could have conferred ecological adaptability and genomic plasticity allowing the survival of the K-T extinction. Based on macrosynteny, we deduced an ancestral karyotype containing 8 conserved clusters for the Gastropoda-Bivalvia lineage. To reveal the mechanism of WGD in shaping adaptability to terrestrial ecosystems, we investigated gene families related to the respiration, aestivation and immune defense of giant African snails. Several mucus-related gene families expanded early in the Stylommatophora lineage, functioning in water retention, immune defense and wound healing. The hemocyanins, PCK and FBP families were doubled and retained after WGD, enhancing the capacity for gas exchange and glucose homeostasis in aestivation. After the WGD, zinc metalloproteinase genes were highly tandemly duplicated to protect tissue against ROS damage. This evidence collectively suggests that although the WGD may not have been the direct driver of the A-T transition, it provided an important legacy for the terrestrial adaptation of the giant African snail.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Yanmei Yang ◽  
Jinpeng Wang ◽  
Jianyong Di

Soybean (Glycine max) is one of the most important crop plants for providing protein and oil. It is important to investigate soybean genome for its economic and scientific value. Polyploidy is a widespread and recursive phenomenon during plant evolution, and it could generate massive duplicated genes which is an important resource for genetic innovation. Improved sequence alignment criteria and statistical analysis are used to identify and characterize duplicated genes produced by polyploidization in soybean. Based on the collinearity method, duplicated genes by whole genome duplication account for 70.3% in soybean. From the statistical analysis of the molecular distances between duplicated genes, our study indicates that the whole genome duplication event occurred more than once in the genome evolution of soybean, which is often distributed near the ends of chromosomes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ievgen Lebeda ◽  
Petr Ráb ◽  
Zuzana Majtánová ◽  
Martin Flajšhans

AbstractCritically endangered sturgeons, having undergone three whole genome duplication events, represent an exceptional example of ploidy plasticity in vertebrates. Three extant ploidy groups, combined with autopolyploidization, interspecific hybridization and the fertility of hybrids are important issues in sturgeon conservation and aquaculture. Here we demonstrate that the sturgeon genome can undergo numerous alterations of ploidy without severe physiological consequences, producing progeny with a range of ploidy levels and extremely high chromosome numbers. Artificial suppression of the first mitotic division alone, or in combination with suppression of the second meiotic division of functionally tetraploid zygotes (4n, C-value = 4.15) of Siberian sturgeon Acipenser baerii and Russian sturgeon A. gueldenstaedtii resulted in progeny of various ploidy levels—diploid/hexaploid (2n/6n) mosaics, hexaploid, octoploid juveniles (8n), and dodecaploid (12n) larvae. Counts between 477 to 520 chromosomes in octoploid juveniles of both sturgeons confirmed the modal chromosome numbers of parental species had been doubled. This exceeds the highest previously documented chromosome count among vertebrates 2n ~ 446 in the cyprinid fish Ptychobarbus dipogon.


2020 ◽  
Vol 107 (8) ◽  
pp. 1148-1164
Author(s):  
Makenzie E. Mabry ◽  
Julia M. Brose ◽  
Paul D. Blischak ◽  
Brittany Sutherland ◽  
Wade T. Dismukes ◽  
...  

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