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Transcriptome asymmetry in synthetic and natural allotetraploid wheats, revealed by RNA ‐sequencing
Author(s) -
Wang Xutong,
Zhang Huakun,
Li Yaling,
Zhang Zhibin,
Li Linfeng,
Liu Bao
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/nph.13678
Subject(s) - biology , polyploid , transcriptome , aegilops , ploidy , domestication , genetics , genome , aegilops tauschii , gene expression , evolutionary biology , botany , gene
Summary Allopolyploidization has occurred frequently within the Triticum – Aegilops complex which provides a suitable system to investigate how allopolyploidization shapes the expression patterns of duplicated homeologs. We have conducted transcriptome‐profiling of leaves and young inflorescences in wild and domesticated tetraploid wheats, Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides ( BBAA ) and ssp. durum ( BBAA ), an extracted tetraploid ( BBAA ), and a synthetic tetraploid (S l S l AA ) wheat together with its diploid parents, Aegilops longissima (S l S l ) and Triticum urartu ( AA ). The two diploid species showed tissue‐specific differences in genome‐wide ortholog expression, which plays an important role in transcriptome shock‐mediated homeolog expression rewiring and hence transcriptome asymmetry in the synthetic tetraploid. Further changes of homeolog expression apparently occurred in natural tetraploid wheats, which led to novel transcriptome asymmetry between the two subgenomes. In particular, our results showed that extremely biased homeolog expression can occur rapidly upon the allotetraploidzation and this trend is further enhanced in the course of domestication and evolution of polyploid wheats. Our results suggest that allopolyploidization is accompanied by distinct phases of homeolog expression changes, with parental legacy playing major roles in the immediate rewiring of homeolog expression upon allopolyploidization, while evolution and domestication under allotetraploidy drive further homeolog‐expression changes toward re‐established subgenome expression asymmetry.