Understanding Brassicaceae evolution through ancestral genome reconstruction

Archive ouverte

Murat, Florent | Louis, Alexandra | Maumus, Florian | Armero Villanueva, Alix | Cooke, Richard | Quesneville, Hadi | Crollius, Hugues Roest | Salse, Jerome

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

Brassicaceae is a family of green plants of high scientific and economic interest, including thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana), cruciferous vegetables (cabbages) and rapeseed.We reconstruct an evolutionary framework of Brassicaceae composed of high-resolution ancestral karyotypes using the genomes of modern A. thaliana, Arabidopsis lyrata, Capsella rubella, Brassica rapa and Thellungiella parvula. The ancestral Brassicaceae karyotype (Brassicaceae lineages I and II) is composed of eight protochromosomes and 20,037 ordered and oriented protogenes. After speciation, it evolved into the ancestral Camelineae karyotype (eight protochromosomes and 22,085 ordered protogenes) and the proto-Calepineae karyotype (seven protochromosomes and 21,035 ordered protogenes) genomes.The three inferred ancestral karyotype genomes are shown here to be powerful tools to unravel the reticulated evolutionary history of extant Brassicaceae genomes regarding the fate of ancestral genes and genomic compartments, particularly centromeres and evolutionary breakpoints. This new resource should accelerate research in comparative genomics and translational research by facilitating the transfer of genomic information from model systems to species of agronomic interest.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Erratum to :"Understanding Brassicaceae evolution through ancestral genome reconstruction" (vol 16, 262, 2015)

Archive ouverte | Murat, Florent | CCSD

Erratum to http://prodinra.inra.fr/record/340189. International audience

GenomicusPlants: a web resource to study genome evolution in flowering plants

Archive ouverte | Louis, Alexandra | CCSD

Comparative genomics combined with phylogenetic reconstructions are powerful approaches to study the evolution of genes and genomes. However, the current rapid expansion of the volume of genomic information makes it increasingly d...

Shared subgenome dominance following polyploidization explains grass genome evolutionary plasticity from a seven protochromosome ancestor with 16K protogenes.

Archive ouverte | Murat, Florent | CCSD

International audience. Modern plant genomes are diploidized paleopolyploids. We revisited grass genome paleohistory in response to the diploidization process through a detailed investigation of the evolutionary fat...

Chargement des enrichissements...