4.8 Article

Ancestral polyploidy in seed plants and angiosperms

Journal

NATURE
Volume 473, Issue 7345, Pages 97-U113

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09916

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [DEB 0638595]
  2. Department of Biology
  3. Huck Institutes of Life Sciences of the Pennsylvania State University
  4. Fudan University
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology [0830009] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology [0829868] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences
  10. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [1025974, 0922742] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Whole-genome duplication (WGD), or polyploidy, followed by gene loss and diploidization has long been recognized as an important evolutionary force in animals, fungi and other organisms(1-3), especially plants. The success of angiosperms has been attributed, in part, to innovations associated with gene or whole-genome duplications(4-6), but evidence for proposed ancient genome duplications pre-dating the divergence of monocots and eudicots remains equivocal in analyses of conserved gene order. Here we use comprehensive phylogenomic analyses of sequenced plant genomes and more than 12.6 million new expressed-sequence-tag sequences from phylogenetically pivotal lineages to elucidate two groups of ancient gene duplications-one in the common ancestor of extant seed plants and the other in the common ancestor of extant angiosperms. Gene duplication events were intensely concentrated around 319 and 192 million years ago, implicating two WGDs in ancestral lineages shortly before the diversification of extant seed plants and extant angiosperms, respectively. Significantly, these ancestral WGDs resulted in the diversification of regulatory genes important to seed and flower development, suggesting that they were involved in major innovations that ultimately contributed to the rise and eventual dominance of seed plants and angiosperms.

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