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Chromosome fusions repatterned recombination rate and facilitated reproductive isolation during Pristionchus nematode speciation

Authors :
Kohta Yoshida
Christian Rödelsperger
Waltraud Röseler
Metta Riebesell
Simo Sun
Taisei Kikuchi
Ralf J. Sommer
Source :
Nature Ecology & Evolution.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Large-scale genome-structural evolution is common in various organisms. Recent developments in speciation genomics revealed the importance of inversions, whereas the role of other genome-structural rearrangements, including chromosome fusions, have not been well characterized. We study genomic divergence and reproductive isolation of closely related nematodes: the androdioecious (hermaphroditic) model Pristionchus pacificus and its dioecious sister species Pristionchus exspectatus. A chromosome-level genome assembly of P. exspectatus using single-molecule and Hi-C sequencing revealed a chromosome-wide rearrangement relative to P. pacificus. Strikingly, genomic characterization and cytogenetic studies including outgroup species Pristionchus occultus indicated two independent fusions involving the same chromosome, ChrIR, between these related species. Genetic linkage analysis indicated that these fusions altered the chromosome-wide pattern of recombination, resulting in large low-recombination regions that probably facilitated the coevolution between some of the ~14.8% of genes across the entire genomes. Quantitative trait locus analyses for hybrid sterility in all three sexes revealed that major quantitative trait loci mapped to the fused chromosome ChrIR. While abnormal chromosome segregations of the fused chromosome partially explain hybrid female sterility, hybrid-specific recombination that breaks linkage of genes in the low-recombination region was associated with hybrid male sterility. Thus, recent chromosome fusions repatterned recombination rate and drove reproductive isolation during Pristionchus speciation.

Details

ISSN :
2397334X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Ecology & Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c8b43fa3f0ac8318d38713b8ea8e4970
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-022-01980-z