Literature DB >> 35961774

An atlas of fish genome evolution reveals delayed rediploidization following the teleost whole-genome duplication.

Elise Parey1,2, Alexandra Louis1, Jérôme Montfort2, Yann Guiguen2, Hugues Roest Crollius1, Camille Berthelot1.   

Abstract

Teleost fishes are ancient tetraploids descended from an ancestral whole-genome duplication that may have contributed to the impressive diversification of this clade. Whole-genome duplications can occur via self-doubling (autopolyploidy) or via hybridization between different species (allopolyploidy). The mode of tetraploidization conditions evolutionary processes by which duplicated genomes return to diploid meiotic pairing, and subsequent genetic divergence of duplicated genes (cytological and genetic rediploidization). How teleosts became tetraploid remains unresolved, leaving a fundamental gap in the interpretation of their functional evolution. As a result of the whole-genome duplication, identifying orthologous and paralogous genomic regions across teleosts is challenging, hindering genome-wide investigations into their polyploid history. Here, we combine tailored gene phylogeny methodology together with a state-of-the-art ancestral karyotype reconstruction to establish the first high-resolution comparative atlas of paleopolyploid regions across 74 teleost genomes. We then leverage this atlas to investigate how rediploidization occurred in teleosts at the genome-wide level. We uncover that some duplicated regions maintained tetraploidy for more than 60 million years, with three chromosome pairs diverging genetically only after the separation of major teleost families. This evidence suggests that the teleost ancestor was an autopolyploid. Further, we find evidence for biased gene retention along several duplicated chromosomes, contradicting current paradigms that asymmetrical evolution is specific to allopolyploids. Altogether, our results offer novel insights into genome evolutionary dynamics following ancient polyploidizations in vertebrates.
© 2022 Parey et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 35961774      PMCID: PMC9528989          DOI: 10.1101/gr.276953.122

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome Res        ISSN: 1088-9051            Impact factor:   9.438


  76 in total

1.  Two evolutionarily distinct classes of paleopolyploidy.

Authors:  Olivier Garsmeur; James C Schnable; Ana Almeida; Cyril Jourda; Angélique D'Hont; Michael Freeling
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2013-12-01       Impact factor: 16.240

2.  Homoeologous exchanges cause extensive dosage-dependent gene expression changes in an allopolyploid crop.

Authors:  Andrew Lloyd; Aurélien Blary; Delphine Charif; Catherine Charpentier; Joseph Tran; Sandrine Balzergue; Etienne Delannoy; Guillem Rigaill; Eric Jenczewski
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2017-10-16       Impact factor: 10.151

3.  Evolution of the fish heart by sub/neofunctionalization of an elastin gene.

Authors:  Yuuta Moriyama; Fumihiro Ito; Hiroyuki Takeda; Tohru Yano; Masataka Okabe; Shigehiro Kuraku; Fred W Keeley; Kazuko Koshiba-Takeuchi
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-01-19       Impact factor: 14.919

4.  Genome evolution in the allotetraploid frog Xenopus laevis.

Authors:  Adam M Session; Yoshinobu Uno; Taejoon Kwon; Jarrod A Chapman; Atsushi Toyoda; Shuji Takahashi; Akimasa Fukui; Akira Hikosaka; Atsushi Suzuki; Mariko Kondo; Simon J van Heeringen; Ian Quigley; Sven Heinz; Hajime Ogino; Haruki Ochi; Uffe Hellsten; Jessica B Lyons; Oleg Simakov; Nicholas Putnam; Jonathan Stites; Yoko Kuroki; Toshiaki Tanaka; Tatsuo Michiue; Minoru Watanabe; Ozren Bogdanovic; Ryan Lister; Georgios Georgiou; Sarita S Paranjpe; Ila van Kruijsbergen; Shengquiang Shu; Joseph Carlson; Tsutomu Kinoshita; Yuko Ohta; Shuuji Mawaribuchi; Jerry Jenkins; Jane Grimwood; Jeremy Schmutz; Therese Mitros; Sahar V Mozaffari; Yutaka Suzuki; Yoshikazu Haramoto; Takamasa S Yamamoto; Chiyo Takagi; Rebecca Heald; Kelly Miller; Christian Haudenschild; Jacob Kitzman; Takuya Nakayama; Yumi Izutsu; Jacques Robert; Joshua Fortriede; Kevin Burns; Vaneet Lotay; Kamran Karimi; Yuuri Yasuoka; Darwin S Dichmann; Martin F Flajnik; Douglas W Houston; Jay Shendure; Louis DuPasquier; Peter D Vize; Aaron M Zorn; Michihiko Ito; Edward M Marcotte; John B Wallingford; Yuzuru Ito; Makoto Asashima; Naoto Ueno; Yoichi Matsuda; Gert Jan C Veenstra; Asao Fujiyama; Richard M Harland; Masanori Taira; Daniel S Rokhsar
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Convergent evolution of conserved mitochondrial pathways underlies repeated adaptation to extreme environments.

Authors:  Ryan Greenway; Nick Barts; Chathurika Henpita; Anthony P Brown; Lenin Arias Rodriguez; Carlos M Rodríguez Peña; Sabine Arndt; Gigi Y Lau; Michael P Murphy; Lei Wu; Dingbo Lin; Michael Tobler; Joanna L Kelley; Jennifer H Shaw
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-06-25       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Antarctic blackfin icefish genome reveals adaptations to extreme environments.

Authors:  Bo-Mi Kim; Angel Amores; Seunghyun Kang; Do-Hwan Ahn; Jin-Hyoung Kim; Il-Chan Kim; Jun Hyuck Lee; Sung Gu Lee; Hyoungseok Lee; Jungeun Lee; Han-Woo Kim; Thomas Desvignes; Peter Batzel; Jason Sydes; Tom Titus; Catherine A Wilson; Julian M Catchen; Wesley C Warren; Manfred Schartl; H William Detrich; John H Postlethwait; Hyun Park
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-02-25       Impact factor: 15.460

7.  Genomes as documents of evolutionary history: a probabilistic macrosynteny model for the reconstruction of ancestral genomes.

Authors:  Yoichiro Nakatani; Aoife McLysaght
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2017-07-15       Impact factor: 6.937

8.  Rhodopsin gene copies in Japanese eel originated in a teleost-specific genome duplication.

Authors:  Yoji Nakamura; Motoshige Yasuike; Miyuki Mekuchi; Yuki Iwasaki; Nobuhiko Ojima; Atushi Fujiwara; Seinen Chow; Kenji Saitoh
Journal:  Zoological Lett       Date:  2017-10-17       Impact factor: 2.836

9.  Deeply conserved synteny resolves early events in vertebrate evolution.

Authors:  Oleg Simakov; Ferdinand Marlétaz; Jia-Xing Yue; Brendan O'Connell; Jerry Jenkins; Alexander Brandt; Robert Calef; Che-Huang Tung; Tzu-Kai Huang; Jeremy Schmutz; Nori Satoh; Jr-Kai Yu; Nicholas H Putnam; Richard E Green; Daniel S Rokhsar
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-04-20       Impact factor: 19.100

10.  Chromosome evolution at the origin of the ancestral vertebrate genome.

Authors:  Christine Sacerdot; Alexandra Louis; Céline Bon; Camille Berthelot; Hugues Roest Crollius
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2018-10-17       Impact factor: 13.583

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