AI Article Synopsis

  • * A new genome sequence related to Brassiceae helped confirm the hybridization model, revealing a significant time gap between the initial hybridizations and notable gene losses, particularly before the addition of the third subgenome.
  • * The analysis showed that each of the three subgenomes displays unique rates of gene loss but functions together seamlessly, suggesting a "mix and match" model where subgenome origin influences gene retention without affecting overall functionality.

Article Abstract

The members of the tribe Brassiceae share a whole-genome triplication (WGT), and one proposed model for its formation is a two-step pair of hybridizations producing hexaploid descendants. However, evidence for this model is incomplete, and the evolutionary and functional constraints that drove evolution after the hexaploidy are even less understood. Here, we report a new genome sequence of , a species sister to most sequenced Brassiceae. Using this new genome and three others that share the hexaploidy, we traced the history of gene loss after the WGT using the Polyploidy Orthology Inference Tool (POInT). We confirm the two-step formation model and infer that there was a significant temporal gap between those two allopolyploidizations, with about a third of the gene losses from the first two subgenomes occurring before the arrival of the third. We also, for the 90,000 individual genes in our study, make parental subgenome assignments, inferring, with measured uncertainty, from which of the progenitor genomes of the allohexaploidy each gene derives. We further show that each subgenome has a statistically distinguishable rate of homoeolog losses. There is little indication of functional distinction between the three subgenomes: the individual subgenomes show no patterns of functional enrichment, no excess of shared protein-protein or metabolic interactions between their members, and no biases in their likelihood of having experienced a recent selective sweep. We propose a "mix and match" model of allopolyploidy, in which subgenome origin drives homoeolog loss propensities but where genes from different subgenomes function together without difficulty.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8092008PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.270033.120DOI Listing

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