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Uneven selection pressure accelerating divergence of Populusand Salix

Authors :
Hou, Jing
Wei, Suyun
Pan, Huixin
Zhuge, Qiang
Yin, Tongming
Source :
Horticulture Research; December 2019, Vol. 6 Issue: 1
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Populus(poplars) and Salix(willows) are sister genera in the Salicaceae family that arise from a common tetraploid ancestor. The karyotypes of these two lineages are distinguished by two major interchromosomal and some minor intrachromosomal rearrangements, but which one is evolutionarily more primitive remains debatable. In this study, we compare the selection pressure acting on the paralogous genes resulting from salicoid duplication (PGRS) within and between the genomes of the two lineages. Purifying selection was determined to act more strongly on the PGRS in willow than on those in poplar, which would cause a faster loss of paralogous duplicates in willow. Therefore, Salixspecies are supposed to evolve faster than Populusspecies, which is consistent with the observation that the former are taxonomically and morphologically more diverse than the latter. In these two lineages, different autosomes were found to have been evolving into sex chromosomes. Examining the ω ratio and the PGRS in the sex determination regions in willow and poplar revealed higher convergent selection pressure and a faster loss of PGRS in the sex determination regions of both lineages. At the chromosome level, the sex chromosome in poplar is characterized by the lowest gene density among all chromosome members, while this feature is not observed on the sex chromosome in willow, suggesting that Populusspecies may inherit the more incipient sex chromosome from their progenitor. Taken together, Salixis supposed to be the nascent lineage arising from the additional round of genome reorganization that distinguishes the karyotypes of the two sister genera. In this study, assessment of ω ratios also detected a list of paralogous genes under unusual selection pressure, which could have special consequences for the adaptive evolution of Salicaceae species. In conclusion, the results of this study provide unique information for better understanding the genetic mechanism accelerating the divergence of these two closely related lineages.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26626810 and 20527276
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Horticulture Research
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs49731583
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-019-0121-y