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result(s) for
"Duplication"
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Evolution of Gene Duplication in Plants
by
Lehti-Shiu, Melissa
,
Panchy, Nicholas
,
Shiu, Shin-Han
in
Evolution, Molecular
,
Gene Duplication
,
Genome, Plant - genetics
2016
Ancient duplication events and a high rate of retention of extant pairs of duplicate genes have contributed to an abundance of duplicate genes in plant genomes. These duplicates have contributed to the evolution of novel functions, such as the production of floral structures, induction of disease resistance, and adaptation to stress. Additionally, recent whole-genome duplications that have occurred in the lineages of several domesticated crop species, including wheat (Triticum aestivum), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), and soybean (Glycine max), have contributed to important agronomic traits, such as grain quality, fruit shape, and flowering time. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms and impacts of gene duplication will be important to future studies of plants in general and of agronomically important crops in particular. In this review, we survey the current knowledge about gene duplication, including gene duplication mechanisms, the potential fates of duplicate genes, models explaining duplicate gene retention, the properties that distinguish duplicate from singleton genes, and the evolutionary impact of gene duplication.
Journal Article
Doubling down on genomes: Polyploidy and crop plants
2014
Polyploidy, or whole genome multiplication, is ubiquitous among angiosperms. Many crop species are relatively recent allopolyploids, resulting from interspecific hybridization and polyploidy. Thus, an appreciation of the evolutionary consequences of (allo)polyploidy is central to our understanding of crop plant domestication, agricultural improvement, and the evolution of angiosperms in general. Indeed, many recent insights into plant biology have been gleaned from polyploid crops, including, but not limited to wheat, tobacco, sugarcane, apple, and cotton. A multitude of evolutionary processes affect polyploid genomes, including rapid and substantial genome reorganization, transgressive gene expression alterations, gene fractionation, gene conversion, genome downsizing, and sub- and neofunctionalization of duplicate genes. Often these genomic changes are accompanied by heterosis, robustness, and the improvement of crop yield, relative to closely related diploids. Historically, however, the genome-wide analysis of polyploid crops has lagged behind those of diploid crops and other model organisms. This lag is partly due to the difficulties in genome assembly, resulting from the genomic complexities induced by combining two or more evolutionarily diverged genomes into a single nucleus and by the significant size of polyploid genomes. In this review, we explore the role of polyploidy in angiosperm evolution, the domestication process and crop improvement. We focus on the potential of modern technologies, particularly next-generation sequencing, to inform us on the patterns and processes governing polyploid crop improvement and phenotypic change subsequent to domestication.
Journal Article
Selective Constraints on Coding Sequences of Nervous System Genes Are a Major Determinant of Duplicate Gene Retention in Vertebrates
by
Robinson-Rechavi, Marc
,
Liu, Jialin
,
Roux, Julien
in
Evolution
,
Evolutionary genetics
,
Gene duplication
2017
The evolutionary history of vertebrates is marked by three ancient whole-genome duplications: two successive rounds in the ancestor of vertebrates, and a third one specific to teleost fishes. Biased loss of most duplicates enriched the genome for specific genes, such as slow evolving genes, but this selective retention process is not well understood. To understand what drives the long-term preservation of duplicate genes, we characterized duplicated genes in terms of their expression patterns. We used a new method of expression enrichment analysis, TopAnat, applied to in situ hybridization data from thousands of genes from zebrafish and mouse. We showed that the presence of expression in the nervous system is a good predictor of a higher rate of retention of duplicate genes after whole-genome duplication. Further analyses suggest that purifying selection against the toxic effects of misfolded or misinteracting proteins, which is particularly strong in nonrenewing neural tissues, likely constrains the evolution of coding sequences of nervous system genes, leading indirectly to the preservation of duplicate genes after whole-genome duplication. Whole-genome duplications thus greatly contributed to the expansion of the toolkit of genes available for the evolution of profound novelties of the nervous system at the base of the vertebrate radiation.
Journal Article
New genes from old: asymmetric divergence of gene duplicates and the evolution of development
by
Holland, Peter W. H.
,
Maeso, Ignacio
,
Dunwell, Thomas L.
in
Animals
,
Asymmetry
,
Biological Evolution
2017
Gene duplications and gene losses have been frequent events in the evolution of animal genomes, with the balance between these two dynamic processes contributing to major differences in gene number between species. After gene duplication, it is common for both daughter genes to accumulate sequence change at approximately equal rates. In some cases, however, the accumulation of sequence change is highly uneven with one copy radically diverging from its paralogue. Such ‘asymmetric evolution’ seems commoner after tandem gene duplication than after whole-genome duplication, and can generate substantially novel genes. We describe examples of asymmetric evolution in duplicated homeobox genes of moths, molluscs and mammals, in each case generating new homeobox genes that were recruited to novel developmental roles. The prevalence of asymmetric divergence of gene duplicates has been underappreciated, in part, because the origin of highly divergent genes can be difficult to resolve using standard phylogenetic methods.
This article is part of the themed issue ‘Evo-devo in the genomics era, and the origins of morphological diversity’.
Journal Article
Degree of Functional Divergence in Duplicates Is Associated with Distinct Roles in Plant Evolution
by
Shirai, Kazumasa
,
Hanada, Kousuke
,
Ezoe, Akihiro
in
Arabidopsis thaliana
,
Discoveries
,
Evolution
2021
Abstract
Gene duplication is a major mechanism to create new genes. After gene duplication, some duplicated genes undergo functionalization, whereas others largely maintain redundant functions. Duplicated genes comprise various degrees of functional diversification in plants. However, the evolutionary fate of high and low diversified duplicates is unclear at genomic scale. To infer high and low diversified duplicates in Arabidopsis thaliana genome, we generated a prediction method for predicting whether a pair of duplicate genes was subjected to high or low diversification based on the phenotypes of knock-out mutants. Among 4,017 pairs of recently duplicated A. thaliana genes, 1,052 and 600 are high and low diversified duplicate pairs, respectively. The predictions were validated based on the phenotypes of generated knock-down transgenic plants. We determined that the high diversified duplicates resulting from tandem duplications tend to have lineage-specific functions, whereas the low diversified duplicates produced by whole-genome duplications are related to essential signaling pathways. To assess the evolutionary impact of high and low diversified duplicates in closely related species, we compared the retention rates and selection pressures on the orthologs of A. thaliana duplicates in two closely related species. Interestingly, high diversified duplicates resulting from tandem duplications tend to be retained in multiple lineages under positive selection. Low diversified duplicates by whole-genome duplications tend to be retained in multiple lineages under purifying selection. Taken together, the functional diversities determined by different duplication mechanisms had distinct effects on plant evolution.
Journal Article
SegMantX: A Novel Tool for Detecting DNA Duplications Uncovers Prevalent Duplications in Plasmids
2025
Abstract
Segmental duplications play an important role in genome evolution via their contribution to copy-number variation, gene-family diversification, and the emergence of novel functions. The detection of segmental duplications is challenging due to heterogeneous amelioration of sequence similarity among duplicates, which hinders the reconstruction of continuous sequence alignment. Here we introduce SegMantX, a novel approach for the identification of diverged segmental duplications in prokaryote genomes using local alignment chaining. In this approach, local alignments resulting from a preliminary sequence similarity search (e.g. BLASTn) are chained into continuous segments. Evaluating the performance of SegMantX using simulated sequences shows that the tool can detect diverged duplications beyond the sensitivity limits of standard alignment-based methods. Applying SegMantX to 6,784 enterobacterial plasmids, we find that 65% plasmids contain duplicated regions and gene duplications, most of which correspond either to dispersed, noncoding regions or duplicated mobile genetic elements (MGEs; e.g. transposons and insertion sequences). Furthermore, we demonstrate the applicability of SegMantX for the identification of diverged gene transfers between replicons and plasmid hybridization events. Our findings highlight MGEs as drivers of segmental duplications in plasmid evolution, leading to the amplification of their cargo genes, including antibiotic resistance genes. SegMantX provides a powerful framework for reconstructing diverged segmental duplications and other alignment problems.
Journal Article
Inference of Ancient Whole-Genome Duplications and the Evolution of Gene Duplication and Loss Rates
2019
Gene tree–species tree reconciliation methods have been employed for studying ancient whole-genome duplication (WGD) events across the eukaryotic tree of life. Most approaches have relied on using maximum likelihood trees and the maximum parsimony reconciliation thereof to count duplication events on specific branches of interest in a reference species tree. Such approaches do not account for uncertainty in the gene tree and reconciliation, or do so only heuristically. The effects of these simplifications on the inference of ancient WGDs are unclear. In particular, the effects of variation in gene duplication and loss rates across the species tree have not been considered. Here, we developed a full probabilistic approach for phylogenomic reconciliation-based WGD inference, accounting for both gene tree and reconciliation uncertainty using a method based on the principle of amalgamated likelihood estimation. The model and methods are implemented in a maximum likelihood and Bayesian setting and account for variation of duplication and loss rates across the species tree, using methods inspired by phylogenetic divergence time estimation. We applied our newly developed framework to ancient WGDs in land plants and investigated the effects of duplication and loss rate variation on reconciliation and gene count based assessment of these earlier proposed WGDs.
Journal Article
Evolutionary strategies drive a balance of the interacting gene products for the CBL and CIPK gene families
by
Zhang, Xiaoxia
,
Li, Xiaoxia
,
Jiao, Yuannian
in
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Arabidopsis - metabolism
2020
• Genes encoding interacting proteins tend to be co-retained after whole-genome duplication (WGD). The preferential retention after WGD has been explained by the gene balance hypothesis (GBH). However, small-scale duplications could independently occur in the connected gene families. Certain evolutionary strategies might keep the dosage balanced.
• Here, we examined the gene duplication, interaction and expression patterns of calcineurin B-like (CBL) and CBL-interacting protein kinase (CIPK) gene families to understand the underlying principles.
• The ratio of the CBL and CIPK gene numbers evolved from 5 : 7 in Physcomitrella to 10 : 26 in Arabidopsis, and retrotransposition, tandem duplication, and WGDs contributed to the expansion. Two pairs of CBLs and six pairs of CIPKs were retained after the α WGD in Arabidopsis, in which specific interaction patterns were identified. In some cases, two retained CBLs (CIPKs) might compete to interact with a sole CIPK (CBL). Results of gene expression analyses indicated that the relatively over-retained duplicates tend to show asymmetric expression, thus avoiding competition.
• In conclusion, our results suggested that the highly specific interaction, together with the differential gene expression pattern, jointly maintained the balanced dosage for the interacting CBL and CIPK proteins.
Journal Article
Lineage-specific rediploidization is a mechanism to explain time-lags between genome duplication and evolutionary diversification
by
Robertson, Fiona M.
,
Grammes, Fabian
,
Redmond, Anthony K.
in
Adaptation
,
Adaptation, Physiological - genetics
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
2017
Background
The functional divergence of duplicate genes (ohnologues) retained from whole genome duplication (WGD) is thought to promote evolutionary diversification. However, species radiation and phenotypic diversification are often temporally separated from WGD. Salmonid fish, whose ancestor underwent WGD by autotetraploidization ~95 million years ago, fit such a ‘time-lag’ model of post-WGD radiation, which occurred alongside a major delay in the rediploidization process. Here we propose a model, ‘lineage-specific ohnologue resolution’ (LORe), to address the consequences of delayed rediploidization. Under LORe, speciation precedes rediploidization, allowing independent ohnologue divergence in sister lineages sharing an ancestral WGD event.
Results
Using cross-species sequence capture, phylogenomics and genome-wide analyses of ohnologue expression divergence, we demonstrate the major impact of LORe on salmonid evolution. One-quarter of each salmonid genome, harbouring at least 4550 ohnologues, has evolved under LORe, with rediploidization and functional divergence occurring on multiple independent occasions >50 million years post-WGD. We demonstrate the existence and regulatory divergence of many LORe ohnologues with functions in lineage-specific physiological adaptations that potentially facilitated salmonid species radiation. We show that LORe ohnologues are enriched for different functions than ‘older’ ohnologues that began diverging in the salmonid ancestor.
Conclusions
LORe has unappreciated significance as a nested component of post-WGD divergence that impacts the functional properties of genes, whilst providing ohnologues available solely for lineage-specific adaptation. Under LORe, which is predicted following many WGD events, the functional outcomes of WGD need not appear ‘explosively’, but can arise gradually over tens of millions of years, promoting lineage-specific diversification regimes under prevailing ecological pressures.
Journal Article
Fern genomes elucidate land plant evolution and cyanobacterial symbioses
2018
Ferns are the closest sister group to all seed plants, yet little is known about their genomes other than that they are generally colossal. Here, we report on the genomes of
Azolla filiculoides
and
Salvinia cucullata
(Salviniales) and present evidence for episodic whole-genome duplication in ferns—one at the base of ‘core leptosporangiates’ and one specific to
Azolla
. One fern-specific gene that we identified, recently shown to confer high insect resistance, seems to have been derived from bacteria through horizontal gene transfer.
Azolla
coexists in a unique symbiosis with N
2
-fixing cyanobacteria, and we demonstrate a clear pattern of cospeciation between the two partners. Furthermore, the
Azolla
genome lacks genes that are common to arbuscular mycorrhizal and root nodule symbioses, and we identify several putative transporter genes specific to
Azolla
–cyanobacterial symbiosis. These genomic resources will help in exploring the biotechnological potential of
Azolla
and address fundamental questions in the evolution of plant life.
The genomes of two fern species,
Azolla filiculoides
and
Salvinia cucullata
, are reported and provide insights into fern-specific whole-genome duplications, fern-specific insect-resistant gene evolution and fern–cyanobacterial symbiosis.
Journal Article