Natural selection and repeated patterns of molecular evolution following allopatric divergence.
Yibo DongShichao ChenShifeng ChengWenbin ZhouQing MaZhiduan ChenCheng-Xin FuXin LiuYun-Peng ZhaoPamela S SoltisGane Ka-Shu WongDouglas E SoltisQui-Yun Jenny XiangPublished in: eLife (2019)
Although geographic isolation is a leading driver of speciation, the tempo and pattern of divergence at the genomic level remain unclear. We examine genome-wide divergence of putatively single-copy orthologous genes (POGs) in 20 allopatric species/variety pairs from diverse angiosperm clades, with 16 pairs reflecting the classic eastern Asia-eastern North America floristic disjunction. In each pair, >90% of POGs are under purifying selection, and <10% are under positive selection. A set of POGs are under strong positive selection, 14 of which are shared by 10-15 pairs, and one shared by all pairs; 15 POGs are annotated to biological processes responding to various stimuli. The relative abundance of POGs under different selective forces exhibits a repeated pattern among pairs despite an ~10 million-year difference in divergence time. Species divergence times are positively correlated with abundance of POGs under moderate purifying selection, but negatively correlated with abundance of POGs under strong purifying selection.