Literature DB >> 25349287

Multiple polyploidy events in the early radiation of nodulating and nonnodulating legumes.

Steven B Cannon1, Michael R McKain2, Alex Harkess3, Matthew N Nelson4, Sudhansu Dash5, Michael K Deyholos6, Yanhui Peng7, Blake Joyce7, Charles N Stewart7, Megan Rolf8, Toni Kutchan8, Xuemei Tan9, Cui Chen9, Yong Zhang9, Eric Carpenter6, Gane Ka-Shu Wong10, Jeff J Doyle11, Jim Leebens-Mack3.   

Abstract

Unresolved questions about evolution of the large and diverse legume family include the timing of polyploidy (whole-genome duplication; WGDs) relative to the origin of the major lineages within the Fabaceae and to the origin of symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Previous work has established that a WGD affects most lineages in the Papilionoideae and occurred sometime after the divergence of the papilionoid and mimosoid clades, but the exact timing has been unknown. The history of WGD has also not been established for legume lineages outside the Papilionoideae. We investigated the presence and timing of WGDs in the legumes by querying thousands of phylogenetic trees constructed from transcriptome and genome data from 20 diverse legumes and 17 outgroup species. The timing of duplications in the gene trees indicates that the papilionoid WGD occurred in the common ancestor of all papilionoids. The earliest diverging lineages of the Papilionoideae include both nodulating taxa, such as the genistoids (e.g., lupin), dalbergioids (e.g., peanut), phaseoloids (e.g., beans), and galegoids (=Hologalegina, e.g., clovers), and clades with nonnodulating taxa including Xanthocercis and Cladrastis (evaluated in this study). We also found evidence for several independent WGDs near the base of other major legume lineages, including the Mimosoideae-Cassiinae-Caesalpinieae (MCC), Detarieae, and Cercideae clades. Nodulation is found in the MCC and papilionoid clades, both of which experienced ancestral WGDs. However, there are numerous nonnodulating lineages in both clades, making it unclear whether the phylogenetic distribution of nodulation is due to independent gains or a single origin followed by multiple losses. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution 2014. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mimosoideae; Papilionoideae; legume; nodulation; polyploidy; symbiotic nitrogen fixation

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25349287      PMCID: PMC4271530          DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msu296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  53 in total

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