| Literature DB >> 30213855 |
J Lucas Boatwright1, Lauren M McIntyre2,3, Alison M Morse2,3, Sixue Chen1,3,4, Mi-Jeong Yoo1, Jin Koh1,4, Pamela S Soltis5,3, Douglas E Soltis1,3,5, W Brad Barbazuk6,3,4.
Abstract
Polyploidy has played a pivotal and recurring role in angiosperm evolution. Allotetraploids arise from hybridization between species and possess duplicated gene copies (homeologs) that serve redundant roles immediately after polyploidization. Although polyploidization is a major contributor to plant evolution, it remains poorly understood. We describe an analytical approach for assessing homeolog-specific expression that begins with de novo assembly of parental transcriptomes and effectively (i) reduces redundancy in de novo assemblies, (ii) identifies putative orthologs, (iii) isolates common regions between orthologs, and (iv) assesses homeolog-specific expression using a robust Bayesian Poisson-Gamma model to account for sequence bias when mapping polyploid reads back to parental references. Using this novel methodology, we examine differential homeolog contributions to the transcriptome in the recently formed allopolyploids Tragopogon mirus and T. miscellus (Compositae). Notably, we assess a larger Tragopogon gene set than previous studies of this system. Using carefully identified orthologous regions and filtering biased orthologs, we find in both allopolyploids largely balanced expression with no strong parental bias. These new methods can be used to examine homeolog expression in any tetrapolyploid system without requiring a reference genome.Entities:
Keywords: RNA-Seq; allopolyploid; homeolog-specific expression; nonmodel; transcriptome
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30213855 PMCID: PMC6218233 DOI: 10.1534/genetics.118.301564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetics ISSN: 0016-6731 Impact factor: 4.562