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An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes

BACKGROUND: Most agriculturally important legumes fall within two sub-clades of the Papilionoid legumes: the Phaseoloids and Galegoids, which diverged about 50 Mya. The Phaseoloids are mostly tropical and include crops such as common bean and soybean. The Galegoids are mostly temperate and include c...

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Autores principales: Bertioli, David J, Moretzsohn, Marcio C, Madsen, Lene H, Sandal, Niels, Leal-Bertioli, Soraya CM, Guimarães, Patricia M, Hougaard, Birgit K, Fredslund, Jakob, Schauser, Leif, Nielsen, Anna M, Sato, Shusei, Tabata, Satoshi, Cannon, Steven B, Stougaard, Jens
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2656529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19166586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-45
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author Bertioli, David J
Moretzsohn, Marcio C
Madsen, Lene H
Sandal, Niels
Leal-Bertioli, Soraya CM
Guimarães, Patricia M
Hougaard, Birgit K
Fredslund, Jakob
Schauser, Leif
Nielsen, Anna M
Sato, Shusei
Tabata, Satoshi
Cannon, Steven B
Stougaard, Jens
author_facet Bertioli, David J
Moretzsohn, Marcio C
Madsen, Lene H
Sandal, Niels
Leal-Bertioli, Soraya CM
Guimarães, Patricia M
Hougaard, Birgit K
Fredslund, Jakob
Schauser, Leif
Nielsen, Anna M
Sato, Shusei
Tabata, Satoshi
Cannon, Steven B
Stougaard, Jens
author_sort Bertioli, David J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Most agriculturally important legumes fall within two sub-clades of the Papilionoid legumes: the Phaseoloids and Galegoids, which diverged about 50 Mya. The Phaseoloids are mostly tropical and include crops such as common bean and soybean. The Galegoids are mostly temperate and include clover, fava bean and the model legumes Lotus and Medicago (both with substantially sequenced genomes). In contrast, peanut (Arachis hypogaea) falls in the Dalbergioid clade which is more basal in its divergence within the Papilionoids. The aim of this work was to integrate the genetic map of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago and improve our understanding of the Arachis genome and legume genomes in general. To do this we placed on the Arachis map, comparative anchor markers defined using a previously described bioinformatics pipeline. Also we investigated the possible role of transposons in the patterns of synteny that were observed. RESULTS: The Arachis genetic map was substantially aligned with Lotus and Medicago with most synteny blocks presenting a single main affinity to each genome. This indicates that the last common whole genome duplication within the Papilionoid legumes predated the divergence of Arachis from the Galegoids and Phaseoloids sufficiently that the common ancestral genome was substantially diploidized. The Arachis and model legume genomes comparison made here, together with a previously published comparison of Lotus and Medicago allowed all possible Arachis-Lotus-Medicago species by species comparisons to be made and genome syntenies observed. Distinct conserved synteny blocks and non-conserved regions were present in all genome comparisons, implying that certain legume genomic regions are consistently more stable during evolution than others. We found that in Medicago and possibly also in Lotus, retrotransposons tend to be more frequent in the variable regions. Furthermore, while these variable regions generally have lower densities of single copy genes than the more conserved regions, some harbor high densities of the fast evolving disease resistance genes. CONCLUSION: We suggest that gene space in Papilionoids may be divided into two broadly defined components: more conserved regions which tend to have low retrotransposon densities and are relatively stable during evolution; and variable regions that tend to have high retrotransposon densities, and whose frequent restructuring may fuel the evolution of some gene families.
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spelling pubmed-26565292009-03-17 An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes Bertioli, David J Moretzsohn, Marcio C Madsen, Lene H Sandal, Niels Leal-Bertioli, Soraya CM Guimarães, Patricia M Hougaard, Birgit K Fredslund, Jakob Schauser, Leif Nielsen, Anna M Sato, Shusei Tabata, Satoshi Cannon, Steven B Stougaard, Jens BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Most agriculturally important legumes fall within two sub-clades of the Papilionoid legumes: the Phaseoloids and Galegoids, which diverged about 50 Mya. The Phaseoloids are mostly tropical and include crops such as common bean and soybean. The Galegoids are mostly temperate and include clover, fava bean and the model legumes Lotus and Medicago (both with substantially sequenced genomes). In contrast, peanut (Arachis hypogaea) falls in the Dalbergioid clade which is more basal in its divergence within the Papilionoids. The aim of this work was to integrate the genetic map of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago and improve our understanding of the Arachis genome and legume genomes in general. To do this we placed on the Arachis map, comparative anchor markers defined using a previously described bioinformatics pipeline. Also we investigated the possible role of transposons in the patterns of synteny that were observed. RESULTS: The Arachis genetic map was substantially aligned with Lotus and Medicago with most synteny blocks presenting a single main affinity to each genome. This indicates that the last common whole genome duplication within the Papilionoid legumes predated the divergence of Arachis from the Galegoids and Phaseoloids sufficiently that the common ancestral genome was substantially diploidized. The Arachis and model legume genomes comparison made here, together with a previously published comparison of Lotus and Medicago allowed all possible Arachis-Lotus-Medicago species by species comparisons to be made and genome syntenies observed. Distinct conserved synteny blocks and non-conserved regions were present in all genome comparisons, implying that certain legume genomic regions are consistently more stable during evolution than others. We found that in Medicago and possibly also in Lotus, retrotransposons tend to be more frequent in the variable regions. Furthermore, while these variable regions generally have lower densities of single copy genes than the more conserved regions, some harbor high densities of the fast evolving disease resistance genes. CONCLUSION: We suggest that gene space in Papilionoids may be divided into two broadly defined components: more conserved regions which tend to have low retrotransposon densities and are relatively stable during evolution; and variable regions that tend to have high retrotransposon densities, and whose frequent restructuring may fuel the evolution of some gene families. BioMed Central 2009-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2656529/ /pubmed/19166586 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-45 Text en Copyright © 2009 Bertioli et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bertioli, David J
Moretzsohn, Marcio C
Madsen, Lene H
Sandal, Niels
Leal-Bertioli, Soraya CM
Guimarães, Patricia M
Hougaard, Birgit K
Fredslund, Jakob
Schauser, Leif
Nielsen, Anna M
Sato, Shusei
Tabata, Satoshi
Cannon, Steven B
Stougaard, Jens
An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title_full An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title_fullStr An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title_short An analysis of synteny of Arachis with Lotus and Medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
title_sort analysis of synteny of arachis with lotus and medicago sheds new light on the structure, stability and evolution of legume genomes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2656529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19166586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-45
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