Repetitive DNA restructuring across multiple Nicotiana allopolyploidisation events shows a lack of strong cytoplasmic bias in influencing repeat turnover
Authors
Dodsworth, StevenGuignard, Maite S.
Pérez-Escobar, Oscar A.
Struebig, Monika
Chase, Mark W.
Leitch, Andrew R.
Affiliation
University of BedfordshireQueen Mary University of London
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Curtin University
Issue Date
2020-02-19Subjects
allopolyploidisationpolyploidy
repeats
retroelements
genome reorganisation
genome evolution
nuclear-cytoplasmic interaction hypothesis
diploidisation
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Allopolyploidy is acknowledged as an important force in plant evolution. Frequent allopolyploidy in Nicotiana across different timescales permits the evaluation of genome restructuring and repeat dynamics through time. Here we use a clustering approach on high-throughput sequence reads to identify the main classes of repetitive elements following three allotetraploid events, and how these are inherited from the closest extant relatives of the maternal and paternal subgenome donors. In all three cases, there was a lack of clear maternal, cytoplasmic bias in repeat evolution, i.e., lack of a predicted bias towards maternal subgenome-derived repeats, with roughly equal contributions from both parental subgenomes. Different overall repeat dynamics were found across timescales of <0.5 (N. rustica L.), 4 (N. repanda Willd.) and 6 (N. benthamiana Domin) Ma, with nearly additive, genome upsizing, and genome downsizing, respectively. Lower copy repeats were inherited in similar abundance to the parental subgenomes, whereas higher copy repeats contributed the most to genome size change in N. repanda and N. benthamiana. Genome downsizing post-polyploidisation may be a general long-term trend across angiosperms, but at more recent timescales there is species-specific variance as found in Nicotiana.Citation
Dodsworth S., Guignard M.S., Pérez-Escobar O.A., Struebig M., Chase M.W., Leitch A.R. (2020) 'Repetitive DNA restructuring across multiple Nicotiana allopolyploidisation events shows a lack of strong cytoplasmic bias in influencing repeat turnover', Genes, 11 (2), pp.216-.Publisher
MDPIJournal
GenesPubMed ID
32092894PubMed Central ID
PMC7074350Additional Links
https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/11/2/216https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7074350/pdf/genes-11-00216.pdf
Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2073-4425EISSN
2073-4425ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3390/genes11020216
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