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result(s) for
"Reproduction, Asexual - genetics"
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Genomic evidence for ameiotic evolution in the bdelloid rotifer Adineta vaga
by
This work was supported by Genoscope-CES (where most of the sequencing was performed), by US National Science Foundation grants MCB-0821956 and MCB-1121334 to I.A., by German Research Foundation grant HA 5163/2-1 to O.H., by grant 11.G34.31.0008 from the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation to A.S.K., by grant NSF CAREER number 0644282 to M.K., by US National Science Foundation grant MCB-0923676 to D.B.M.W., by FRFC grant 2.4.655.09.F from the Belgian Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (FNRS) and a start-up grant from the University of Namur to K.V.D.; J.F.F. and K.V.D. thank also J.-P. Descy (University of Namur) for funding support
,
Rocha, Martine Da
,
Architecture et fonction des macromolécules biologiques (AFMB) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
in
631/181/2474
,
631/208/182
,
631/208/212/2304
2013
Loss of sexual reproduction is considered an evolutionary dead end for metazoans, but bdelloid rotifers challenge this view as they appear to have persisted asexually for millions of years1. Neither male sex organs nor meiosis have ever been observed in these microscopic animals: oocytes are formed through mitotic divisions, with no reduction of chromosome number and no indication of chromosome pairing2. However, current evidence does not exclude that they may engage in sex on rare, cryptic occasions. Here we report the genome of a bdelloid rotifer, Adineta vaga (Davis, 1873)3, and show that its structure is incompatible with conventional meiosis. At gene scale, the genome of A. vaga is tetraploid and comprises both anciently duplicated segments and less divergent allelic regions. However, in contrast to sexual species, the allelic regions are rearranged and sometimes even found on the same chromosome. Such structure does not allow meiotic pairing; instead, we find abundant evidence of gene conversion, which may limit the accumulation of deleterious mutations in the absence of meiosis. Gene families involved in resistance to oxidation, carbohydrate metabolism and defence against transposons are significantly expanded, which may explain why transposable elements cover only 3% of the assembled sequence. Furthermore, 8% of the genes are likely to be of non-metazoan origin and were probably acquired horizontally. This apparent convergence between bdelloids and prokaryotes sheds new light on the evolutionary significance of sex.
Journal Article
Genomic analyses of primitive, wild and cultivated citrus provide insights into asexual reproduction
2017
Qiang Xu and colleagues sequence four citrus species
de novo
, along with 100 accessions, including primitive, wild and cultivated citrus. Their genomic analyses associate the
CitRWP
gene with polyembryony and suggest that regions harboring energy- and reproduction-associated genes are probably under selection in cultivated citrus.
The emergence of apomixis—the transition from sexual to asexual reproduction—is a prominent feature of modern citrus. Here we
de novo
sequenced and comprehensively studied the genomes of four representative citrus species. Additionally, we sequenced 100 accessions of primitive, wild and cultivated citrus. Comparative population analysis suggested that genomic regions harboring energy- and reproduction-associated genes are probably under selection in cultivated citrus. We also narrowed the genetic locus responsible for citrus polyembryony, a form of apomixis, to an 80-kb region containing 11 candidate genes. One of these,
CitRWP
, is expressed at higher levels in ovules of polyembryonic cultivars. We found a miniature inverted-repeat transposable element insertion in the promoter region of
CitRWP
that cosegregated with polyembryony. This study provides new insights into citrus apomixis and constitutes a promising resource for the mining of agriculturally important genes.
Journal Article
Sex speeds adaptation by altering the dynamics of molecular evolution
by
Desai, Michael M.
,
McDonald, Michael J.
,
Rice, Daniel P.
in
631/181/2474
,
631/181/2475
,
Adaptation
2016
In a comparison between replicate sexual and asexual populations of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, sexual reproduction increases fitness by reducing clonal interference and alters the type of mutations that get fixed by natural selection.
Sex makes natural selection more efficient
Explaining the prevalence of sexual reproduction despite its costly nature is a famously long-standing question in evolutionary biology. Theory and some experimental studies suggest various mechanisms responsible, such as a reduction in clonal interference or the ability to reduce hitchhiking of deleterious mutations. Using the experimental evolution of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
as a model system, Michael Desai and colleagues compared the sequence-level dynamics of adaptation in sexual and asexual populations. They find that sexual reproduction increases fitness by reducing clonal interference between beneficial mutations and alters the type of mutations that are fixed by natural selection. The net effect is that that sex speeds adaptation and allows natural selection to more efficiently sort beneficial from deleterious mutations.
Sex and recombination are pervasive throughout nature despite their substantial costs
1
. Understanding the evolutionary forces that maintain these phenomena is a central challenge in biology
2
,
3
. One longstanding hypothesis argues that sex is beneficial because recombination speeds adaptation
4
. Theory has proposed several distinct population genetic mechanisms that could underlie this advantage. For example, sex can promote the fixation of beneficial mutations either by alleviating interference competition (the Fisher–Muller effect)
5
,
6
or by separating them from deleterious load (the ruby in the rubbish effect)
7
,
8
. Previous experiments confirm that sex can increase the rate of adaptation
9
,
10
,
11
,
12
,
13
,
14
,
15
,
16
,
17
, but these studies did not observe the evolutionary dynamics that drive this effect at the genomic level. Here we present the first, to our knowledge, comparison between the sequence-level dynamics of adaptation in experimental sexual and asexual
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
populations, which allows us to identify the specific mechanisms by which sex speeds adaptation. We find that sex alters the molecular signatures of evolution by changing the spectrum of mutations that fix, and confirm theoretical predictions that it does so by alleviating clonal interference. We also show that substantially deleterious mutations hitchhike to fixation in adapting asexual populations. In contrast, recombination prevents such mutations from fixing. Our results demonstrate that sex both speeds adaptation and alters its molecular signature by allowing natural selection to more efficiently sort beneficial from deleterious mutations.
Journal Article
Uncovering the essential genes of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum by saturation mutagenesis
by
Adapa, Swamy R.
,
Jiang, Rays H. Y.
,
Zhang, Min
in
Animals
,
Antimalarials - pharmacology
,
Artemisinins - pharmacology
2018
Malaria is caused by eukaryotic Plasmodium spp. parasites that classically infect red blood cells. These are difficult organisms to investigate genetically because of their AT-rich genomes. Zhang et al. have exploited this peculiarity by using piggyBac transposon insertion sites to achieve saturation-level mutagenesis for identifying and ranking essential genes and drug targets (see the Perspective by White and Rathod). Genes that are current candidates for drug targets were identified as essential, in contrast to many vaccine target genes. Notably, the proteasome degradation pathway was confirmed as a target for developing therapeutic interventions because of the several essential genes involved and the link to the mechanism of action of the current frontline drug, artemisinin. Science , this issue p. eaap7847 ; see also p. 490 Mutagenesis of a human malaria parasite reveals a core set of genes essential for asexual growth in red blood cells in vitro. Severe malaria is caused by the apicomplexan parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Despite decades of research, the distinct biology of these parasites has made it challenging to establish high-throughput genetic approaches to identify and prioritize therapeutic targets. Using transposon mutagenesis of P. falciparum in an approach that exploited its AT-rich genome, we generated more than 38,000 mutants, saturating the genome and defining mutability and fitness costs for over 87% of genes. Of 5399 genes, our study defined 2680 genes as essential for optimal growth of asexual blood stages in vitro. These essential genes are associated with drug resistance, represent leading vaccine candidates, and include approximately 1000 Plasmodium -conserved genes of unknown function. We validated this approach by testing proteasome pathways for individual mutants associated with artemisinin sensitivity.
Journal Article
Tempo and mode of genome evolution in a 50,000-generation experiment
by
Lenski, Richard E.
,
Ribeck, Noah
,
Barrick, Jeffrey E.
in
631/181/2474
,
631/181/2475
,
631/326/325/2482
2016
Adaptation by natural selection depends on the rates, effects and interactions of many mutations, making it difficult to determine what proportion of mutations in an evolving lineage are beneficial. Here we analysed 264 complete genomes from 12
Escherichia coli
populations to characterize their dynamics over 50,000 generations. The populations that retained the ancestral mutation rate support a model in which most fixed mutations are beneficial, the fraction of beneficial mutations declines as fitness rises, and neutral mutations accumulate at a constant rate. We also compared these populations to mutation-accumulation lines evolved under a bottlenecking regime that minimizes selection. Nonsynonymous mutations, intergenic mutations, insertions and deletions are overrepresented in the long-term populations, further supporting the inference that most mutations that reached high frequency were favoured by selection. These results illuminate the shifting balance of forces that govern genome evolution in populations adapting to a new environment.
Whole-genome sequencing of 264 clones sampled from 12
Escherichia coli
populations evolved over 50,000 generations under identical culture conditions is used to characterize the patterns and dynamics of genome evolution over time.
Watching bacterial evolution
Richard Lenski and colleagues report whole-genome sequencing of 264 clones sampled from 12 bacterial populations evolved over 50,000 generations under identical culture conditions as part of the project known as the
Escherichia coli
long-term evolution experiment, which has been under way since 1988. The authors characterize the patterns and dynamics of genome evolution over time, including the rate of neutral and beneficial mutation accumulation, in this uniquely controlled experimental system.
Journal Article
Bacterial endosymbionts influence host sexuality and reveal reproductive genes of early divergent fungi
by
Schwardt, Nicole H.
,
Mondo, Stephen J.
,
Sun, Hui
in
631/181/2481
,
631/326/193/2540
,
Addictions
2017
Many heritable mutualisms, in which beneficial symbionts are transmitted vertically between host generations, originate as antagonisms with parasite dispersal constrained by the host. Only after the parasite gains control over its transmission is the symbiosis expected to transition from antagonism to mutualism. Here, we explore this prediction in the mutualism between the fungus
Rhizopus microsporus
(
Rm
, Mucoromycotina) and a beta-proteobacterium
Burkholderia
, which controls host asexual reproduction. We show that reproductive addiction of
Rm
to endobacteria extends to mating, and is mediated by the symbiont gaining transcriptional control of the fungal
ras2
gene, which encodes a GTPase central to fungal reproductive development. We also discover candidate G-protein-coupled receptors for the perception of trisporic acids, mating pheromones unique to Mucoromycotina. Our results demonstrate that regulating host asexual proliferation and modifying its sexual reproduction are sufficient for the symbiont’s control of its own transmission, needed for antagonism-to-mutualism transition in heritable symbioses. These properties establish the
Rm-Burkholderia
symbiosis as a powerful system for identifying reproductive genes in Mucoromycotina.
Cells of the fungus
Rhizopus microsporus
contain
Burkholderia
endobacteria that control its asexual reproduction. Here, the authors show that the endobacteria also mediate mating of the fungal host by modulating expression of a GTPase central to fungal reproductive development.
Journal Article
Stress-induced DNA methylation changes and their heritability in asexual dandelions
by
Verhoeven, Koen J. F.
,
Jansen, Jeroen J.
,
van Dijk, Peter J.
in
abiotic stress
,
Amplified fragment length polymorphism
,
Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis
2010
DNA methylation can cause heritable phenotypic modifications in the absence of changes in DNA sequence. Environmental stresses can trigger methylation changes and this may have evolutionary consequences, even in the absence of sequence variation. However, it remains largely unknown to what extent environmentally induced methylation changes are transmitted to offspring, and whether observed methylation variation is truly independent or a downstream consequence of genetic variation between individuals. Genetically identical apomictic dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) plants were exposed to different ecological stresses, and apomictic offspring were raised in a common unstressed environment. We used methylation-sensitive amplified fragment length polymorphism markers to screen genome-wide methylation alterations triggered by stress treatments and to assess the heritability of induced changes. Various stresses, most notably chemical induction of herbivore and pathogen defenses, triggered considerable methylation variation throughout the genome. Many modifications were faithfully transmitted to offspring. Stresses caused some epigenetic divergence between treatment and controls, but also increased epigenetic variation among plants within treatments. These results show the following. First, stress-induced methylation changes are common and are mostly heritable. Second, sequence-independent, autonomous methylation variation is readily generated. This highlights the potential of epigenetic inheritance to play an independent role in evolutionary processes, which is superimposed on the system of genetic inheritance.
Journal Article
A yeast living ancestor reveals the origin of genomic introgressions
2020
Genome introgressions drive evolution across the animal
1
, plant
2
and fungal
3
kingdoms. Introgressions initiate from archaic admixtures followed by repeated backcrossing to one parental species. However, how introgressions arise in reproductively isolated species, such as yeast
4
, has remained unclear. Here we identify a clonal descendant of the ancestral yeast hybrid that founded the extant
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Alpechin lineage
5
, which carries abundant
Saccharomyces paradoxus
introgressions. We show that this clonal descendant, hereafter defined as a ‘living ancestor’, retained the ancestral genome structure of the first-generation hybrid with contiguous
S. cerevisiae
and
S. paradoxus
subgenomes. The ancestral first-generation hybrid underwent catastrophic genomic instability through more than a hundred mitotic recombination events, mainly manifesting as homozygous genome blocks generated by loss of heterozygosity. These homozygous sequence blocks rescue hybrid fertility by restoring meiotic recombination and are the direct origins of the introgressions present in the Alpechin lineage. We suggest a plausible route for introgression evolution through the reconstruction of extinct stages and propose that genome instability allows hybrids to overcome reproductive isolation and enables introgressions to emerge.
A yeast clonal descendant of an ancient hybridization event is identified and sheds light on the early evolution of the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Alpechin lineage and its abundant
Saccharomyces paradoxus
introgressions.
Journal Article
The genome of Schmidtea mediterranea and the evolution of core cellular mechanisms
2018
The planarian
Schmidtea mediterranea
is an important model for stem cell research and regeneration, but adequate genome resources for this species have been lacking. Here we report a highly contiguous genome assembly of
S. mediterranea
, using long-read sequencing and a
de novo
assembler (MARVEL) enhanced for low-complexity reads. The
S. mediterranea
genome is highly polymorphic and repetitive, and harbours a novel class of giant retroelements. Furthermore, the genome assembly lacks a number of highly conserved genes, including critical components of the mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint, but planarians maintain checkpoint function. Our genome assembly provides a key model system resource that will be useful for studying regeneration and the evolutionary plasticity of core cell biological mechanisms.
An improved genome assembly for
Schmidtea mediterranea
shows that the genome is highly polymorphic and repetitive, and lacks multiple genes encoding core components of cell biological mechanisms.
Genome of a regenerating worm
The flatworm
Schmidtea mediterranea
is an important model for regeneration. Jochen Rink, Eugene Myers and colleagues report an improved genome assembly for the planarian
S. mediterranea
using long-read sequencing and a new genome assembler called MARVEL. They find that the
S. mediterranea
genome is highly polymorphic and repetitive, and includes a novel class of giant retroelements. This improved genome assembly provides a useful resource for studying regeneration and the evolution of cell plasticity.
Journal Article
Distribution of fixed beneficial mutations and the rate of adaptation in asexual populations
by
Good, Benjamin H.
,
Desai, Michael M.
,
Rouzine, Igor M.
in
Adaptation
,
Adaptation, Physiological
,
Adaptation, Physiological - genetics
2012
When large asexual populations adapt competition between simultaneously segregating mutations slows the rate of adaptation and restricts the set of mutations that eventually fix. This phenomenon of interference arises from competition between mutations of different strengths as well as competition between mutations that arise on different fitness backgrounds. Previous work has explored each of these effects in isolation, but the way they combine to influence the dynamics of adaptation remains largely unknown. Here, we describe a theoretical model to treat both aspects of interference in large populations. We calculate the rate of adaptation and the distribution of fixed mutational effects accumulated by the population. We focus particular attention on the case when the effects of beneficial mutations are exponentially distributed, as well as on a moré general class of exponential-like distributions. In both cases, we show that the rate of adaptation and the influence of genetic background on the fixation of new mutants is equivalent to an effective model with a single selection coefficient and rescaled mutation rate, and we explicitly calculate these effective parameters. We find that the effective selection coefficient exactly coincides with the most common fixed mutational effect. This equivalence leads to an intuitive picture of the relative importance of different types of interference effects, which can shift dramatically as a function of the population size, mutation rate, and the underlying distribution of fitness effects.
Journal Article