4.8 Article

The Genomic Selfing Syndrome Accompanies the Evolutionary Breakdown of Heterostyly

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 168-180

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msaa199

Keywords

deleterious mutations; effective population size; mating system; Primula; selection efficacy

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB31000000]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31971394, 31770417, 31570384]
  3. Yunling Scholarship of Yunnan Province [YLXL20170001]
  4. Light of West China Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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The transition from outcrossing to selfing leads to reduced genetic diversity and lower rates of adaptive evolution in selfing populations compared to outcrossing populations. The reduced efficacy of purifying selection and purging of deleterious mutations support the theoretical expectations of the genomic selfing syndrome. Self-fertilization plays a major role in molecular evolutionary processes with genomic signatures of selfing evident in both old and young homostylous populations.
The evolutionary transition from outcrossing to selfing can have important genomic consequences. Decreased effective population size and the reduced efficacy of selection are predicted to play an important role in the molecular evolution of the genomes of selfing species. We investigated evidence for molecular signatures of the genomic selfing syndrome using 66 species of Primula including distylous (outcrossing) and derived homostylous (selfing) taxa. We complemented our comparative analysis with a microevolutionary study of P. chungensis, which is polymorphic for mating system and consists of both distylous and homostylous populations. We generated chloroplast and nuclear genomic data sets for distylous, homostylous, and distylous-homostylous species and identified patterns of nonsynonymous to synonymous divergence (d(N)/d(S)) and polymorphism (pi(N)/pi(S)) in species or lineages with contrasting mating systems. Our analysis of coding sequence divergence and polymorphism detected strongly reduced genetic diversity and heterozygosity, decreased efficacy of purifying selection, purging of large-effect deleterious mutations, and lower rates of adaptive evolution in samples from homostylous compared with distylous populations, consistent with theoretical expectations of the genomic selfing syndrome. Our results demonstrate that self-fertilization is a major driver of molecular evolutionary processes with genomic signatures of selfing evident in both old and relatively young homostylous populations.

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