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Co-expression network analysis of duplicate genes in maize (Zea mays L.) reveals no subgenome bias.

Authors :
Lin Li
Briskine, Roman
Schaefer, Robert
Schnable, Patrick S.
Myers, Chad L.
Flagel, Lex E.
Springer, Nathan M.
Muehlbauer, Gary J.
Source :
BMC Genomics; 11/4/2016, Vol. 17, p1-15, 15p, 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 3 Graphs
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Gene duplication is prevalent in many species and can result in coding and regulatory divergence. Gene duplications can be classified as whole genome duplication (WGD), tandem and inserted (non-syntenic). In maize, WGD resulted in the subgenomes maize1 and maize2, of which maize1 is considered the dominant subgenome. However, the landscape of co-expression network divergence of duplicate genes in maize is still largely uncharacterized. Results: To address the consequence of gene duplication on co-expression network divergence, we developed a gene co-expression network from RNA-seq data derived from 64 different tissues/stages of the maize reference inbred-B73. WGD, tandem and inserted gene duplications exhibited distinct regulatory divergence. Inserted duplicate genes were more likely to be singletons in the co-expression networks, while WGD duplicate genes were likely to be co-expressed with other genes. Tandem duplicate genes were enriched in the co-expression pattern where co-expressed genes were nearly identical for the duplicates in the network. Older gene duplications exhibit more extensive co-expression variation than younger duplications. Overall, non-syntenic genes primarily from inserted duplications show more co-expression divergence. Also, such enlarged coexpression divergence is significantly related to duplication age. Moreover, subgenome dominance was not observed in the co-expression networks - maize1 and maize2 exhibit similar levels of intra subgenome correlations. Intriguingly, the level of inter subgenome co-expression was similar to the level of intra subgenome correlations, and genes from specific subgenomes were not likely to be the enriched in co-expression network modules and the hub genes were not predominantly from any specific subgenomes in maize. Conclusions: Our work provides a comprehensive analysis of maize co-expression network divergence for three different types of gene duplications and identifies potential relationships between duplication types, duplication ages and co-expression consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Volume :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119305082
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-3194-0