4.7 Article

Empirical evidence for concerted evolution in the 18S rDNA region of the planktonic diatom genus Chaetoceros

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-80829-6

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  1. H2020 RI Cluster project EMBRIC [GA-654008]
  2. FP7 project ASSEMBLE [GA-227799]
  3. Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn of Naples (The Open University-Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn PhD Program)

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Concerted evolution is a process of homogenisation of repetitive sequences within a genome. By studying Chaetoceros species, researchers found that the dominant haplotype is a result of efficient homogenisation mechanism, while minor haplotypes are mostly generated by incomplete homogenisation. Additionally, the study showed that phylogenetic networks can be inferred from environmental data to visualize concerted evolution.
Concerted evolution is a process of homogenisation of repetitive sequences within a genome through unequal crossing over and gene conversion. This homogenisation is never fully achieved because mutations always create new variants. Classically, concerted evolution has been detected as noise in electropherograms and these variants have been characterised through cloning and sequencing of subsamples of amplified products. However, this approach limits the number of detectable variants and provides no information about the abundance of each variant. In this study, we investigated concerted evolution by using environmental time-series metabarcoding data, single strain high-throughput sequencing (HTS) and a collection of Sanger reference barcode sequences. We used six species of the marine planktonic diatom genus Chaetoceros as study system. Abundance plots obtained from environmental metabarcoding and single strain HTS showed the presence of a haplotype far more abundant than all the others (the dominant haplotype) and identical to the reference sequences of that species obtained with Sanger sequencing. This distribution fitted best with Zipf's law among the rank abundance/ dominance models tested. Furthermore, in each strain 99% of reads showed a similarity of 99% with the dominant haplotype, confirming the efficiency of the homogenisation mechanism of concerted evolution. We also demonstrated that minor haplotypes found in the environmental samples are not only technical artefacts, but mostly intragenomic variation generated by incomplete homogenisation. Finally, we showed that concerted evolution can be visualised inferring phylogenetic networks from environmental data. In conclusion, our study provides an important contribution to the understanding of concerted evolution and to the interpretation of DNA barcoding and metabarcoding data based on multigene family markers.

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