Literature DB >> 18842825

Differential accumulation of retroelements and diversification of NB-LRR disease resistance genes in duplicated regions following polyploidy in the ancestor of soybean.

Roger W Innes1, Carine Ameline-Torregrosa, Tom Ashfield, Ethalinda Cannon, Steven B Cannon, Ben Chacko, Nicolas W G Chen, Arnaud Couloux, Anita Dalwani, Roxanne Denny, Shweta Deshpande, Ashley N Egan, Natasha Glover, Christian S Hans, Stacy Howell, Dan Ilut, Scott Jackson, Hongshing Lai, Jafar Mammadov, Sara Martin Del Campo, Michelle Metcalf, Ashley Nguyen, Majesta O'Bleness, Bernard E Pfeil, Ram Podicheti, Milind B Ratnaparkhe, Sylvie Samain, Iryna Sanders, Béatrice Ségurens, Mireille Sévignac, Sue Sherman-Broyles, Vincent Thareau, Dominic M Tucker, Jason Walling, Adam Wawrzynski, Jing Yi, Jeff J Doyle, Valérie Geffroy, Bruce A Roe, M A Saghai Maroof, Nevin D Young.   

Abstract

The genomes of most, if not all, flowering plants have undergone whole genome duplication events during their evolution. The impact of such polyploidy events is poorly understood, as is the fate of most duplicated genes. We sequenced an approximately 1 million-bp region in soybean (Glycine max) centered on the Rpg1-b disease resistance gene and compared this region with a region duplicated 10 to 14 million years ago. These two regions were also compared with homologous regions in several related legume species (a second soybean genotype, Glycine tomentella, Phaseolus vulgaris, and Medicago truncatula), which enabled us to determine how each of the duplicated regions (homoeologues) in soybean has changed following polyploidy. The biggest change was in retroelement content, with homoeologue 2 having expanded to 3-fold the size of homoeologue 1. Despite this accumulation of retroelements, over 77% of the duplicated low-copy genes have been retained in the same order and appear to be functional. This finding contrasts with recent analyses of the maize (Zea mays) genome, in which only about one-third of duplicated genes appear to have been retained over a similar time period. Fluorescent in situ hybridization revealed that the homoeologue 2 region is located very near a centromere. Thus, pericentromeric localization, per se, does not result in a high rate of gene inactivation, despite greatly accelerated retrotransposon accumulation. In contrast to low-copy genes, nucleotide-binding-leucine-rich repeat disease resistance gene clusters have undergone dramatic species/homoeologue-specific duplications and losses, with some evidence for partitioning of subfamilies between homoeologues.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18842825      PMCID: PMC2593655          DOI: 10.1104/pp.108.127902

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Physiol        ISSN: 0032-0889            Impact factor:   8.340


  96 in total

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