4.8 Article

Genomic analyses reveal dead-end hybridization between two deeply divergent kiwifruit species rather than homoploid hybrid speciation

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16336

Keywords

reproductive barriers; chromosomal rearrangements; hybridization; genome; speciation; kiwifruit

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Despite a lack of documented homoploid hybridization events in plants, this study provides insights into the evolutionary consequence of homoploid hybridization in kiwifruit species. Through genome sequencing and population genomic analyses, the study reveals that A. zhejiangensis is mainly composed of F-1 hybrids of A. hemsleyana and A. eriantha, with gene flow initiating about 0.98 million years ago. The study also identifies five inversions containing genes related to pollen germination and pollen tube growth that may account for the fertility breakdown in hybrids. Despite distinct morphological traits, A. zhejiangensis does not initiate speciation.
Despite the importance of hybridization in evolution, the evolutionary consequence of homoploid hybridizations in plants remains poorly understood. Specially, homoploid hybridization events have been rarely documented due to a lack of genomic resources and methodological limitations. Actinidia zhejiangensis was suspected to have arisen from hybridization of Actinidia eriantha and Actinidia hemsleyana or Actinidia rufa. However, this species was very rare in nature and exhibited sympatric distribution with its potential parent species, which implied it might be a spontaneous hybrid of ongoing homoploid hybridization. Here, we illustrate the dead-end homoploid hybridization and genomic basis of isolating barriers between A. eriantha and A. hemsleyana through whole genome sequencing and population genomic analyses. Chromosome-scale genome assemblies of A. zhejiangensis and A. hemsleyana were generated. The chromosomes of A. zhejiangensis are confidently assigned to the two haplomes, and one of them originates from A. eriantha and the other originates from A. hemsleyana. Whole genome resequencing data reveal that A. zhejiangensis are mainly F-1 hybrids of A. hemsleyana and A. eriantha and gene flow initiated about 0.98 million years ago, implying both strong genetic barriers and ongoing hybridization between these two deeply divergent kiwifruit species. Five inversions containing genes involved in pollen germination and pollen tube growth might account for the fertility breakdown of hybrids between A. hemsleyana and A. eriantha. Despite its distinct morphological traits and long recurrent hybrid origination, A. zhejiangensis does not initiate speciation. Collectively, our study provides new insights into homoploid hybridization in plants and provides genomic resources for evolutionary and functional genomic studies of kiwifruit.

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