| Literature DB >> 25896453 |
Xiyin Wang1, Jingpeng Wang2, Dianchuan Jin3, Hui Guo4, Tae-Ho Lee5, Tao Liu3, Andrew H Paterson6.
Abstract
Multiple comparisons among genomes can clarify their evolution, speciation, and functional innovations. To date, the genome sequences of eight grasses representing the most economically important Poaceae (grass) clades have been published, and their genomic-level comparison is an essential foundation for evolutionary, functional, and translational research. Using a formal and conservative approach, we aligned these genomes. Direct comparison of paralogous gene pairs all duplicated simultaneously reveal striking variation in evolutionary rates among whole genomes, with nucleotide substitution slowest in rice and up to 48% faster in other grasses, adding a new dimension to the value of rice as a grass model. We reconstructed ancestral genome contents for major evolutionary nodes, potentially contributing to understanding the divergence and speciation of grasses. Recent fossil evidence suggests revisions of the estimated dates of key evolutionary events, implying that the pan-grass polyploidization occurred ∼96 million years ago and could not be related to the Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction as previously inferred. Adjusted dating to reflect both updated fossil evidence and lineage-specific evolutionary rates suggested that maize subgenome divergence and maize-sorghum divergence were virtually simultaneous, a coincidence that would be explained if polyploidization directly contributed to speciation. This work lays a solid foundation for Poaceae translational genomics.Entities:
Keywords: evolutionary rates; genome alignment; grasses; polyploidy; whole-genome duplication
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25896453 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2015.04.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164