articleGenome biologyFeb 21, 2019GOLD OA

Gene duplication and evolution in recurring polyploidization–diploidization cycles in plants

Nanjing Agricultural University · University of Georgia

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

The sharp increase of plant genome and transcriptome data provide valuable resources to investigate evolutionary consequences of gene duplication in a range of taxa, and unravel common principles underlying duplicate gene retention.

Results

We survey 141 sequenced plant genomes to elucidate consequences of gene and genome duplication, processes central to the evolution of biodiversity. We develop a pipeline named DupGen_finder to identify different modes of gene duplication in plants. Genes derived from whole-genome, tandem, proximal, transposed, or dispersed duplication differ in abundance, selection pressure, expression divergence, and gene conversion rate among genomes. The number of WGD-derived duplicate genes decreases exponentially with increasing age of duplication events-transposed duplication- and dispersed duplication-derived genes declined in parallel. In contrast, the frequency of tandem and proximal duplications showed no significant decrease over time, providing a continuous supply of variants available for adaptation to continuously changing environments. Moreover, tandem and proximal duplicates experienced stronger selective pressure than genes formed by other modes and evolved toward biased functional roles involved in plant self-defense. The rate of gene conversion among WGD-derived gene pairs declined over time, peaking shortly after polyploidization. To provide a platform for accessing duplicated gene pairs in different plants, we constructed the Plant Duplicate Gene Database.

Citation impact

1,262
total citations
FWCI
140.53
Percentile
100%
References
238
Citations per year

Authors

8

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biology
  • Gene duplication
  • Human genetics
  • Genetics
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Genome Biology
  • Gene
  • Computational biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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