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Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena

A morphospecies is defined as a taxonomic species based wholly on morphology, but often morphospecies consist of clusters of cryptic species that can be identified genetically or molecularly. The nature of the evolutionary novelty that accompanies speciation in a morphospecies is an intriguing quest...

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Autores principales: Xiong, Jie, Yang, Wentao, Chen, Kai, Jiang, Chuanqi, Ma, Yang, Chai, Xiaocui, Yan, Guanxiong, Wang, Guangying, Yuan, Dongxia, Liu, Yifan, Bidwell, Shelby L., Zafar, Nikhat, Hadjithomas, Michalis, Krishnakumar, Vivek, Coyne, Robert S., Orias, Eduardo, Miao, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6564038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31158217
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000294
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author Xiong, Jie
Yang, Wentao
Chen, Kai
Jiang, Chuanqi
Ma, Yang
Chai, Xiaocui
Yan, Guanxiong
Wang, Guangying
Yuan, Dongxia
Liu, Yifan
Bidwell, Shelby L.
Zafar, Nikhat
Hadjithomas, Michalis
Krishnakumar, Vivek
Coyne, Robert S.
Orias, Eduardo
Miao, Wei
author_facet Xiong, Jie
Yang, Wentao
Chen, Kai
Jiang, Chuanqi
Ma, Yang
Chai, Xiaocui
Yan, Guanxiong
Wang, Guangying
Yuan, Dongxia
Liu, Yifan
Bidwell, Shelby L.
Zafar, Nikhat
Hadjithomas, Michalis
Krishnakumar, Vivek
Coyne, Robert S.
Orias, Eduardo
Miao, Wei
author_sort Xiong, Jie
collection PubMed
description A morphospecies is defined as a taxonomic species based wholly on morphology, but often morphospecies consist of clusters of cryptic species that can be identified genetically or molecularly. The nature of the evolutionary novelty that accompanies speciation in a morphospecies is an intriguing question. Morphospecies are particularly common among ciliates, a group of unicellular eukaryotes that separates 2 kinds of nuclei—the silenced germline nucleus (micronucleus [MIC]) and the actively expressed somatic nucleus (macronucleus [MAC])—within a common cytoplasm. Because of their very similar morphologies, members of the Tetrahymena genus are considered a morphospecies. We explored the hidden genomic evolution within this genus by performing a comprehensive comparative analysis of the somatic genomes of 10 species and the germline genomes of 2 species of Tetrahymena. These species show high genetic divergence; phylogenomic analysis suggests that the genus originated about 300 million years ago (Mya). Seven universal protein domains are preferentially included among the species-specific (i.e., the youngest) Tetrahymena genes. In particular, leucine-rich repeat (LRR) genes make the largest contribution to the high level of genome divergence of the 10 species. LRR genes can be sorted into 3 different age groups. Parallel evolutionary trajectories have independently occurred among LRR genes in the different Tetrahymena species. Thousands of young LRR genes contain tandem arrays of exactly 90-bp exons. The introns separating these exons show a unique, extreme phase 2 bias, suggesting a clonal origin and successive expansions of 90-bp–exon LRR genes. Identifying LRR gene age groups allowed us to document a Tetrahymena intron length cycle. The youngest 90-bp exon LRR genes in T. thermophila are concentrated in pericentromeric and subtelomeric regions of the 5 micronuclear chromosomes, suggesting that these regions act as genome innovation centers. Copies of a Tetrahymena Long interspersed element (LINE)-like retrotransposon are very frequently found physically adjacent to 90-bp exon/intron repeat units of the youngest LRR genes. We propose that Tetrahymena species have used a massive exon-shuffling mechanism, involving unequal crossing over possibly in concert with retrotransposition, to create the unique 90-bp exon array LRR genes.
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spelling pubmed-65640382019-06-20 Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena Xiong, Jie Yang, Wentao Chen, Kai Jiang, Chuanqi Ma, Yang Chai, Xiaocui Yan, Guanxiong Wang, Guangying Yuan, Dongxia Liu, Yifan Bidwell, Shelby L. Zafar, Nikhat Hadjithomas, Michalis Krishnakumar, Vivek Coyne, Robert S. Orias, Eduardo Miao, Wei PLoS Biol Research Article A morphospecies is defined as a taxonomic species based wholly on morphology, but often morphospecies consist of clusters of cryptic species that can be identified genetically or molecularly. The nature of the evolutionary novelty that accompanies speciation in a morphospecies is an intriguing question. Morphospecies are particularly common among ciliates, a group of unicellular eukaryotes that separates 2 kinds of nuclei—the silenced germline nucleus (micronucleus [MIC]) and the actively expressed somatic nucleus (macronucleus [MAC])—within a common cytoplasm. Because of their very similar morphologies, members of the Tetrahymena genus are considered a morphospecies. We explored the hidden genomic evolution within this genus by performing a comprehensive comparative analysis of the somatic genomes of 10 species and the germline genomes of 2 species of Tetrahymena. These species show high genetic divergence; phylogenomic analysis suggests that the genus originated about 300 million years ago (Mya). Seven universal protein domains are preferentially included among the species-specific (i.e., the youngest) Tetrahymena genes. In particular, leucine-rich repeat (LRR) genes make the largest contribution to the high level of genome divergence of the 10 species. LRR genes can be sorted into 3 different age groups. Parallel evolutionary trajectories have independently occurred among LRR genes in the different Tetrahymena species. Thousands of young LRR genes contain tandem arrays of exactly 90-bp exons. The introns separating these exons show a unique, extreme phase 2 bias, suggesting a clonal origin and successive expansions of 90-bp–exon LRR genes. Identifying LRR gene age groups allowed us to document a Tetrahymena intron length cycle. The youngest 90-bp exon LRR genes in T. thermophila are concentrated in pericentromeric and subtelomeric regions of the 5 micronuclear chromosomes, suggesting that these regions act as genome innovation centers. Copies of a Tetrahymena Long interspersed element (LINE)-like retrotransposon are very frequently found physically adjacent to 90-bp exon/intron repeat units of the youngest LRR genes. We propose that Tetrahymena species have used a massive exon-shuffling mechanism, involving unequal crossing over possibly in concert with retrotransposition, to create the unique 90-bp exon array LRR genes. Public Library of Science 2019-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6564038/ /pubmed/31158217 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000294 Text en © 2019 Xiong et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Xiong, Jie
Yang, Wentao
Chen, Kai
Jiang, Chuanqi
Ma, Yang
Chai, Xiaocui
Yan, Guanxiong
Wang, Guangying
Yuan, Dongxia
Liu, Yifan
Bidwell, Shelby L.
Zafar, Nikhat
Hadjithomas, Michalis
Krishnakumar, Vivek
Coyne, Robert S.
Orias, Eduardo
Miao, Wei
Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title_full Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title_fullStr Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title_full_unstemmed Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title_short Hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—The landscape of rapidly evolving genes in Tetrahymena
title_sort hidden genomic evolution in a morphospecies—the landscape of rapidly evolving genes in tetrahymena
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6564038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31158217
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000294
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