| Literature DB >> 18416842 |
Lex Flagel1, Joshua Udall, Dan Nettleton, Jonathan Wendel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Polyploidy has played a prominent role in shaping the genomic architecture of the angiosperms. Through allopolyploidization, several modern Gossypium (cotton) species contain two divergent, although largely redundant genomes. Owing to this redundancy, these genomes can play host to an array of evolutionary processes that act on duplicate genes.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18416842 PMCID: PMC2330141 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7007-6-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Figure 1Phylogenetic context and inference of homoeologous expression evolution in . (A) Phylogentic relationships among the cotton accessions used in this study. An allopolyploidy event between A- and D-genome diploid species (red star) created modern allopolyploid Gossypium hirsutum (AD1). Using models of the ancenstral genome donors (A2 and D5), an interspecific diploid hybrid (F1) was created (blue star). Although not a perfect match, the model A- and D-genome donors are the best modern representatives of the diploids that underwent allopolyploidization to form AD1 and, as such, provide the best available reconstruction this ancient event. (B) Possible expression phenotypes and associated evolutionary inference. The far left pie represents equal expression among model diploid progenitor species (denoted by A2 and D5). Given this starting condition, several expression states are possible following allopolyploidy or hybridization. Some potential outcomes are indicated by the five pies on the right (At and Dt denote co-resident genomes, either in the hybrid or allopolyploid). (C) Detection of conserved homoeolog-specific single nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs). Given an alignment of expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences from orthologous genes from both diploid and allopolyploid genomes, species- and genome-specific SNPs (all SNPs highlighted in gray) can be detected. The middle SNP is an example of a genome-specific SNP. With this conserved SNP, homoeolog- and allele-specific microarray probes can be generated (potential microarray probe region highlighted in blue), and used to assay expression in allopolyploid and hybrid species.
Figure 2Inferred contributions to the transcriptome by A- and D-genomes in a natural . (A) A- and D-genome contribution to the transcriptome for 1,383 homoeologous/allelic gene pairs. Each gene pair categorized based on a linear model analysis of three replicate measures of genomic contribution. 'Shared genes' are those with expression patterns that are conserved between allotetraploid G. hirsutum (AD1) and the diploid F1 hybrid (F1). (B) Diagrammatic representation of the conservation of genes with biased expression. (C) Scatterplot comparing the homoeolog expression log ratios found in the natural allotetraploid AD1 to the synthetic F1 hybrid. Each point represents a single gene. The correlation (r) and best-fit line are indicated in red. This correlation has a p-value less than 2.2 × 10-16, indicating that it is significantly different from zero. (D) Kernel density estimates of the homoeolog expression log ratios for all 1,383 genes from the 1:1 mix (green line), F1 hybrid (black line), and AD1 allotetraploid (red line) cotton. This plot demonstrates an erosion of equal contribution from both genomes and a shift toward more extreme values in the allopolyploid when compared with the F1 or 1:1 mix.
Details of plant materials used in this study
| Species name | Genome designation | Accession | Ploidy level | Location of origin |
| A2 | cv. AKA-8401 | Diploid | Africa | |
| D5 | Accession unnamed | Diploid | Peru | |
| A2♀ X D5♂ | Accession unnamed | Diploid | Synthetic hybrid | |
| AD1 | cv. Maxxa | Allotetraploid | Mexico/Central America |
Natural allotetraploid Gossypium evolved 1 to 2 MYA from diploid A- and D-genome progenitors, most similar to the modern species G. arboreum and G. raimondii [8, 43]. The A-genome parent is the inferred cytoplasmic donor to G. hirsutum [44, 45], and thus the F1 cross was created in the same manner, with A2 as the maternal parent.