Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy

Plant genomes reduce in size following a whole-genome duplication event, and one gene in a duplicate gene pair can lose function in absence of selective pressure to maintain duplicate gene copies. Maize ( L.) and its sister genus, , share a genome duplication event that occurred 5 to 26 million year...

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Main Authors: Christine M. Gault, Karl A. Kremling, Edward S. Buckler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-11-01
Series:The Plant Genome
Online Access:https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180012
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spelling doaj-7a2cb1aad44742648558a148aea1c68f2020-11-25T01:19:22ZengWileyThe Plant Genome1940-33722018-11-0111310.3835/plantgenome2018.02.0012Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient PolyploidyChristine M. GaultKarl A. KremlingEdward S. BucklerPlant genomes reduce in size following a whole-genome duplication event, and one gene in a duplicate gene pair can lose function in absence of selective pressure to maintain duplicate gene copies. Maize ( L.) and its sister genus, , share a genome duplication event that occurred 5 to 26 million years ago. Because few genomic resources for exist, it is unknown whether grasses and maize have maintained a similar set of genes that have resisted decay into pseudogenes. Here we present high-quality de novo transcriptome assemblies for two species: (L.) L. and Porter ex Vasey. Genes with experimental protein evidence in maize were good candidates for genes resistant to pseudogenization in both genera because pseudogenes by definition do not produce protein. We tested whether 15,160 maize genes with protein evidence are resisting gene loss and whether their homologs are also resisting gene loss. Protein-encoding maize transcripts and their homologs have higher guanine–cytosine (GC) content, higher gene expression levels, and more conserved expression levels than putatively untranslated maize transcripts and their homologs. These results suggest that similar genes may be decaying into pseudogenes in both genera after a shared ancient polyploidy event. The transcriptome assemblies provide a high-quality genomic resource that can provide insight into the evolution of maize, a highly valuable crop worldwide.https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180012
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christine M. Gault
Karl A. Kremling
Edward S. Buckler
spellingShingle Christine M. Gault
Karl A. Kremling
Edward S. Buckler
Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
The Plant Genome
author_facet Christine M. Gault
Karl A. Kremling
Edward S. Buckler
author_sort Christine M. Gault
title Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
title_short Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
title_full Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
title_fullStr Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
title_full_unstemmed Tripsacum De novo Transcriptome Assemblies Reveal Parallel Gene Evolution with Maize after Ancient Polyploidy
title_sort tripsacum de novo transcriptome assemblies reveal parallel gene evolution with maize after ancient polyploidy
publisher Wiley
series The Plant Genome
issn 1940-3372
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Plant genomes reduce in size following a whole-genome duplication event, and one gene in a duplicate gene pair can lose function in absence of selective pressure to maintain duplicate gene copies. Maize ( L.) and its sister genus, , share a genome duplication event that occurred 5 to 26 million years ago. Because few genomic resources for exist, it is unknown whether grasses and maize have maintained a similar set of genes that have resisted decay into pseudogenes. Here we present high-quality de novo transcriptome assemblies for two species: (L.) L. and Porter ex Vasey. Genes with experimental protein evidence in maize were good candidates for genes resistant to pseudogenization in both genera because pseudogenes by definition do not produce protein. We tested whether 15,160 maize genes with protein evidence are resisting gene loss and whether their homologs are also resisting gene loss. Protein-encoding maize transcripts and their homologs have higher guanine–cytosine (GC) content, higher gene expression levels, and more conserved expression levels than putatively untranslated maize transcripts and their homologs. These results suggest that similar genes may be decaying into pseudogenes in both genera after a shared ancient polyploidy event. The transcriptome assemblies provide a high-quality genomic resource that can provide insight into the evolution of maize, a highly valuable crop worldwide.
url https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180012
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