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Gradual polyploid genome evolution revealed by pan-genomic analysis of Brachypodium hybridum and its diploid progenitors.

Sean P GordonBruno Contreras-MoreiraJoshua J LevyArmin DjameiAngelika Czedik-EysenbergVirginia S TartaglioAdam SessionJoel A MartinAmy CartwrightAndrew KatzVasanth R SinganEugene GoltsmanKerrie BarryVinh Ha Dinh-ThiBoulos ChalhoubAntonio Diaz-PerezRuben SanchoJoanna LusinskaElzbieta WolnyCandida NibauJohn H DoonanLuis Alejandro Jose MurChris PlottJerry W JenkinsSamuel P HazenScott J LeeShengqiang ShuDavid M GoodsteinDaniel S RokhsarJeremy SchmutzRobert HasterokPilar CatalanJohn P Vogel
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Our understanding of polyploid genome evolution is constrained because we cannot know the exact founders of a particular polyploid. To differentiate between founder effects and post polyploidization evolution, we use a pan-genomic approach to study the allotetraploid Brachypodium hybridum and its diploid progenitors. Comparative analysis suggests that most B. hybridum whole gene presence/absence variation is part of the standing variation in its diploid progenitors. Analysis of nuclear single nucleotide variants, plastomes and k-mers associated with retrotransposons reveals two independent origins for B. hybridum, ~1.4 and ~0.14 million years ago. Examination of gene expression in the younger B. hybridum lineage reveals no bias in overall subgenome expression. Our results are consistent with a gradual accumulation of genomic changes after polyploidization and a lack of subgenome expression dominance. Significantly, if we did not use a pan-genomic approach, we would grossly overestimate the number of genomic changes attributable to post polyploidization evolution.
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