z-logo
Premium
Repeat proliferation and partial endoreplication jointly shape the patterns of genome size evolution in orchids
Author(s) -
Chumová Zuzana,
Záveská Eliška,
Hloušková Petra,
Ponert Jan,
Schmidt PhilippAndré,
Čertner Martin,
Mandáková Terezie,
Trávníček Pavel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/tpj.15306
Subject(s) - endoreduplication , genome size , biology , genome , evolutionary biology , ploidy , genetics , gene
Summary Although the evolutionary drivers of genome size change are known, the general patterns and mechanisms of plant genome size evolution are yet to be established. Here we aim to assess the relative importance of proliferation of repetitive DNA, chromosomal variation (including polyploidy), and the type of endoreplication for genome size evolution of the Pleurothallidinae, the most species‐rich orchid lineage. Phylogenetic relationships between 341 Pleurothallidinae representatives were refined using a target enrichment hybrid capture combined with high‐throughput sequencing approach. Genome size and the type of endoreplication were assessed using flow cytometry supplemented with karyological analysis and low‐coverage Illumina sequencing for repeatome analysis on a subset of samples. Data were analyzed using phylogeny‐based models. Genome size diversity (0.2–5.1 Gbp) was mostly independent of profound chromosome count variation (2 n  = 12–90) but tightly linked with the overall content of repetitive DNA elements. Species with partial endoreplication (PE) had significantly greater genome sizes, and genomic repeat content was tightly correlated with the size of the non‐endoreplicated part of the genome. In PE species, repetitive DNA is preferentially accumulated in the non‐endoreplicated parts of their genomes. Our results demonstrate that proliferation of repetitive DNA elements and PE together shape the patterns of genome size diversity in orchids.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here