4.3 Article

Pichia sorbitophila, an Interspecies Yeast Hybrid, Reveals Early Steps of Genome Resolution After Polyploidization

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 299-311

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1534/g3.111.000745

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Consortium National de Recherche en Genomique (CNRG)
  2. CNRS [GDR 2354]
  3. ANR [ANR-05-BLAN-0331]
  4. University of Bordeaux 1
  5. Aquitaine Region in the program Genotypage et Genomique Comparee
  6. ACI IMPBIO Genolevures En Ligne
  7. Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia, Portugal
  8. Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian
  9. Siemens SA
  10. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/33528/2008]
  11. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/33528/2008] Funding Source: FCT

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Polyploidization is an important process in the evolution of eukaryotic genomes, but ensuing molecular mechanisms remain to be clarified. Autopolyploidization or whole-genome duplication events frequently are resolved in resulting lineages by the loss of single genes from most duplicated pairs, causing transient gene dosage imbalance and accelerating speciation through meiotic infertility. Allopolyploidization or formation of interspecies hybrids raises the problem of genetic incompatibility (Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller effect) and may be resolved by the accumulation of mutational changes in resulting lineages. In this article, we show that an osmotolerant yeast species, Pichia sorbitophila, recently isolated in a concentrated sorbitol solution in industry, illustrates this last situation. Its genome is amosaic of homologous and homeologous chromosomes, or parts thereof, that corresponds to a recently formed hybrid in the process of evolution. The respective parental contributions to this genome were characterized using existing variations in GC content. The genomic changes that occurred during the short period since hybrid formation were identified (e. g., loss of heterozygosity, unilateral loss of rDNA, reciprocal exchange) and distinguished from those undergone by the two parental genomes after separation from their common ancestor (i.e., NUMT (NUclear sequences of MiTochondrial origin) insertions, gene acquisitions, gene location movements, reciprocal translocation). We found that the physiological characteristics of this new yeast species are determined by specific but unequal contributions of its two parents, one of which could be identified as very closely related to an extant Pichia farinosa strain.

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