Effects of parental genetic divergence on gene expression patterns in interspecific hybrids of Camellia.
Min ZhangYi-Wei TangJi QiXin-Kai LiuDan-Feng YanNai-Sheng ZhongNai-Qi TaoJi-Yin GaoYu-Guo WangZhi-Ping SongJi YangWen-Ju ZhangPublished in: BMC genomics (2019)
The discordance within hybrid would intensify as the parents become more divergent, manifesting as more DEGs would be non-additively expressed. Trans-regulatory divergence contributed more to the additively inherited genes than cis, however, its contribution to expression difference would be weakened as cis mutations accumulated over time; and this might be an important reason for that the more divergent the parents are, the greater proportion of DEGs would be non-additively expressed in hybrid.