论文标题
基因家族的扩增促进了淡水联合双壳类的适应
Gene family amplification facilitates adaptation in freshwater Unionid bivalve Megalonaias nervosa
论文作者
论文摘要
由于生物体面临着巨大的选择性压力,因此需要新的遗传物质来促进适应。在遗传新颖性的来源中,基因的重复和转座元素(TES)提供了新的基因或新的调节模式,可以促进进化变化。随着基因组测序的进步,可以更广泛地了解当种群受到威胁时,基因家族的增殖和含量如何在非模型物种中进化。目前,淡水双壳类动物(Unionidae)面临严重的人为挑战。由于污染,水道堵塞和过度捕捞,美国超过70%的物种受到威胁,濒危或灭绝。我们为神经支原体创建了一个参考基因组,以确定面对这些广泛的环境挑战时基因组含量如何发展。我们观察到最近的一系列可转座元件增殖,导致基因组含量的382 MB扩展。基因家族的扩张很常见,每个一代基因的重复率为1.16 x 10^-8。细胞色素P450,ABC转运蛋白,HSP70基因,von Willebrand蛋白,几丁质代谢基因,饮食蛋白和Opsin基因家族的扩增显着更大,并显示出选择的签名。我们使用进化论评估SNP和重复进化变化的相对贡献。估计值表明,基因家族的演化可能提供神经支原体中遗传变异的特殊底物,而PSGV = 0.185,而PSGV = 0.067,单核苷酸变化。因此,我们建议基因家族进化是促进适应的基因组中“有希望的怪物”的来源。
As organisms are faced with intense rapidly changing selective pressures, new genetic material is required to facilitate adaptation. Among sources of genetic novelty, gene duplications and transposable elements (TEs) offer new genes or new regulatory patterns that can facilitate evolutionary change. With advances in genome sequencing it is possible to gain a broader view of how gene family proliferation and TE content evolve in non-model species when populations become threatened. Freshwater bivalves (Unionidae) currently face severe anthropogenic challenges. Over 70% of species in the United States are threatened, endangered or extinct due to pollution, damming of waterways, and overfishing. We have created a reference genome for M. nervosa to determine how genome content has evolved in the face of these widespread environmental challenges. We observe a burst of recent transposable element proliferation causing a 382 Mb expansion in genome content. Gene family expansion is common, with a duplication rate of 1.16 x 10^-8 per gene per generation. Cytochrome P450, ABC transporters, Hsp70 genes, von Willebrand proteins, chitin metabolism genes, mitochondria eating proteins, and opsin gene families have experienced significantly greater amplification and show signatures of selection. We use evolutionary theory to assess the relative contribution of SNPs and duplications in evolutionary change. Estimates suggest that gene family evolution may offer an exceptional substrate of genetic variation in M. nervosa, with Psgv=0.185 compared with Psgv=0.067 for single nucleotide changes. Hence, we suggest that gene family evolution is a source of "hopeful monsters" within the genome that facilitate adaptation.