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Genome evolution of ferns: evidence for relative stasis of genome size across the fern phylogeny
Author(s) -
Clark James,
Hidalgo Oriane,
Pellicer Jaume,
Liu Hongmei,
Marquardt Jeannine,
Robert Yannis,
Christenhusz Maarten,
Zhang Shouzhou,
Gibby Mary,
Leitch Ilia J.,
Schneider Harald
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.13833
Subject(s) - genome size , genome , biology , fern , evolutionary biology , phylogenetic tree , genome evolution , phylogenetics , chromosome , genetics , gene , botany
Summary The genome evolution of ferns has been considered to be relatively static compared with angiosperms. In this study, we analyse genome size data and chromosome numbers in a phylogenetic framework to explore three hypotheses: the correlation of genome size and chromosome number, the origin of modern ferns from ancestors with high chromosome numbers, and the occurrence of several whole‐genome duplications during the evolution of ferns. To achieve this, we generated new genome size data, increasing the percentage of fern species with genome sizes estimated to 2.8% of extant diversity, and ensuring a comprehensive phylogenetic coverage including at least three species from each fern order. Genome size was correlated with chromosome number across all ferns despite some substantial variation in both traits. We observed a trend towards conservation of the amount of DNA per chromosome, although Osmundaceae and Psilotaceae have substantially larger chromosomes. Reconstruction of the ancestral genome traits suggested that the earliest ferns were already characterized by possessing high chromosome numbers and that the earliest divergences in ferns were correlated with substantial karyological changes. Evidence for repeated whole‐genome duplications was found across the phylogeny. Fern genomes tend to evolve slowly, albeit genome rearrangements occur in some clades.

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