| Literature DB >> 33772797 |
John E Bowers1, Andrew H Paterson1.
Abstract
Polyploidy is ubiquitous and often recursive in plant lineages, most frequently resulting in extinction but occasionally associated with great evolutionary success. However, instead of chromosome numbers exponentially increasing due to recurrent polyploidy, most angiosperm species have fewer than 14 chromosome pairs. Following genome duplication, diploidisation can render one copy of essential genes nonfunctional without fitness cost. In isolated subpopulations, alternate (homoeologous) gene copies can be lost, creating incompatibilities that reduce fitness of hybrids between subpopulations, constraining exchange of favourable genetic changes and reducing species fitness. When multiple sets of incompatible genes are genetically linked, their deleterious effects are not independent. The effective number of independently acting sets of incompatible loci in hybrids is limited by chromosome number and recombination. Therefore, species with many chromosomes are subject to a higher fitness penalty during diploidisation. Karyotypic changes, especially fusions, that reduce gene flow are normally fitness disadvantages, but during the diploidisation process, can increase fitness by reducing mixing of differentially diploidised alleles. Fitness penalties caused by diploidisation favour accelerated karyotypic change, with each change increasing barriers to gene flow, contributing to speciation. Lower chromosome numbers and increased chromosome fusions confer advantages to surviving the diploidisation process following polyploid formation, by independent mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller incompatibility; angiosperms; chromosome number; diploidisation; karyotype evolution; polyploidy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33772797 DOI: 10.1111/nph.17361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151