Evolutionary dynamics of transposable elements and satellite DNAs in polyploid Spartina species
Jazyk angličtina Země Irsko Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
33288000
DOI
10.1016/j.plantsci.2020.110671
PII: S0168-9452(20)30277-6
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Genome dynamics, Polyploidy, Satellite DNA, Spartina, Transposable elements,
- MeSH
- fylogeneze MeSH
- genom rostlinný genetika MeSH
- lipnicovité genetika MeSH
- molekulární evoluce * MeSH
- polyploidie * MeSH
- satelitní DNA genetika MeSH
- Southernův blotting MeSH
- transpozibilní elementy DNA genetika MeSH
- vysoce účinné nukleotidové sekvenování MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- satelitní DNA MeSH
- transpozibilní elementy DNA MeSH
Repeated sequences and polyploidy play a central role in plant genome dynamics. Here, we analyze the evolutionary dynamics of repeats in tetraploid and hexaploid Spartina species that diverged during the last 10 million years within the Chloridoideae, one of the poorest investigated grass lineages. From high-throughput genome sequencing, we annotated Spartina repeats and determined what sequence types account for the genome size variation among species. We examined whether differential genome size evolution correlated with ploidy levels and phylogenetic relationships. We also examined the tempo of repeat sequence dynamics associated with allopatric speciation over the last 3-6 million years between hexaploid species that diverged on the American and European Atlantic coasts and tetraploid species from North and South America. The tetraploid S. spartinae, whose phylogenetic placement has been debated, exhibits a similar repeat content as hexaploid species, suggesting common ancestry. Genome expansion or contraction resulting from repeat dynamics seems to be explained mostly by the contrasting divergence times between species, rather than by genome changes triggered by ploidy level change per se. One 370 bp satellite may be exhibiting 'meiotic drive' and driving chromosome evolution in S. alterniflora. Our results provide crucial insights for investigating the genetic and epigenetic consequences of such differential repeat dynamics on the ecology and distribution of the meso- and neopolyploid Spartina species.
Department of Comparative Plant and Fungal Biology Royal Botanic Gardens Kew TW9 3DS UK
Institute of Biophysics Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Brno CZ 61265 Czech Republic
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Queen Mary University of London London E1 4NS UK
UMR CNRS 6553 ECOBIO Université de Rennes 1 F 35042 Rennes Cedex France
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