4.8 Article

Genome-Wide Reconstruction of Rediploidization Following Autopolyploidization across One Hundred Million Years of Salmonid Evolution

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab310

Keywords

whole-genome duplication; rediploidization; ohnolog; phylogenomics; genome evolution

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BBS/E/D/10002070]
  2. Frimedbio program of the Research Council of Norway [241016]
  3. University of Aberdeen Elphinstone scholarship with additional support fromthe Government of Karnataka

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This study investigates the long-term outcomes of autopolyploid rediploidization in salmonid fishes using genome-wide resolution. Analysis reveals an initial wave of rediploidization in the late Cretaceous followed by a period of genomic stasis and a second rediploidization wave in the early Eocene, coinciding with species diversification. Insights into potential functional outcomes of delayed rediploidization are provided through gene set enrichment, gene expression, and codon-based selection analyses. The study enhances our understanding of delayed autopolyploid rediploidization and has broad implications for future studies of WGD events.
The long-term evolutionary impacts of whole-genome duplication (WGD) are strongly influenced by the ensuing rediploidization process. Following autopolyploidization, rediploidization involves a transition from tetraploid to diploid meiotic pairing, allowing duplicated genes (ohnologs) to diverge genetically and functionally. Our understanding of autopolyploid rediploidization has been informed by a WGD event ancestral to salmonid fishes, where large genomic regions are characterized by temporally delayed rediploidization, allowing lineage-specific ohnolog sequence divergence in the major salmonid clades. Here, we investigate the long-term outcomes of autopolyploid rediploidization at genome-wide resolution, exploiting a recent explosion of salmonid genome assemblies, including a new genome sequence for the huchen (Hucho hucho). We developed a genome alignment approach to capture duplicated regions across multiple species, allowing us to create 121,864 phylogenetic trees describing genome-wide ohnolog divergence across salmonid evolution. Using molecular clock analysis, we show that 61% of the ancestral salmonid genome experienced an initial wave of rediploidization in the late Cretaceous (85-106 Ma). This was followed by a period of relative genomic stasis lasting 17-39 My, where much of the genome remained tetraploid. A second rediploidization wave began in the early Eocene and proceeded alongside species diversification, generating predictable patterns of lineage-specific ohnolog divergence, scaling in complexity with the number of speciation events. Using gene set enrichment, gene expression, and codon-based selection analyses, we provide insights into potential functional outcomes of delayed rediploidization. This study enhances our understanding of delayed autopolyploid rediploidization and has broad implications for future studies of WGD events.

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