4.8 Article

Distinct Expression and Methylation Patterns for Genes with Different Fates following a Single Whole-Genome Duplication in Flowering Plants

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 37, Issue 8, Pages 2394-2413

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msaa105

Keywords

whole-genome duplication; gene expression; methylation; gene balance; subgenome dominance

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB31000000]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31570220, 31870208, 31700197]
  3. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences [2019335]
  4. Hubei Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [2019CFB275]
  5. Hubei Chenguang Talented Youth Development Foundation
  6. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [833522]
  7. Ministry of Science, Research and Technology (Iran)

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For most sequenced flowering plants, multiple whole-genome duplications (WGDs) are found. Duplicated genes following WGD often have different fates that can quickly disappear again, be retained for long(er) periods, or subsequently undergo small-scale duplications. However, how different expression, epigenetic regulation, and functional constraints are associated with these different gene fates following a WGD still requires further investigation due to successive WGDs in angiosperms complicating the gene trajectories. In this study, we investigate lotus (Nelumbo nucifera), an angiosperm with a single WGD during the K-pg boundary. Based on improved intraspecific-synteny identification by a chromosome-level assembly, transcriptome, and bisulfite sequencing, we explore not only the fundamental distinctions in genomic features, expression, and methylation patterns of genes with different fates after a WGD but also the factors that shape post-WGD expression divergence and expression bias between duplicates. We found that after a WGD genes that returned to single copies show the highest levels and breadth of expression, gene body methylation, and intron numbers, whereas the long-retained duplicates exhibit the highest degrees of protein-protein interactions and protein lengths and the lowest methylation in gene flanking regions. For those long-retained duplicate pairs, the degree of expression divergence correlates with their sequence divergence, degree in protein-protein interactions, and expression level, whereas their biases in expression level reflecting subgenome dominance are associated with the bias of subgenome fractionation. Overall, our study on the paleopolyploid nature of lotus highlights the impact of different functional constraints on gene fate and duplicate divergence following a single WGD in plant.

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