Genome Evolution of Neurospora tetrasperma
In this thesis work, I have used a comparative genomics approach to study a fungal model organism, Neurospora tetrasperma. My specific focus has been on genomic introgression, intron evolution, chromosomal structural rearrangements and codon usage. All of the studies are based on large-scale dataset...
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Format: | Doctoral Thesis |
Language: | English |
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Uppsala universitet, Evolutionsbiologi
2013
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Online Access: | http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-207330 http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8753-9 |
Summary: | In this thesis work, I have used a comparative genomics approach to study a fungal model organism, Neurospora tetrasperma. My specific focus has been on genomic introgression, intron evolution, chromosomal structural rearrangements and codon usage. All of the studies are based on large-scale dataset generated by next-generation sequencing technology (NGS), combined with other techniques, such as Optical Mapping. In the introgression study, we detected large-scale introgression tracts in three N. tetrasperma lineages, and the introgression showed allele-specific and chromosomal-specific pattern. In the study of introns, we found indications of mRNA mediated intron loss and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) mediated intron gains in N. tetrasperma. We found that selection is involved in shaping intron gains and losses, and associated with intron position, intron phase and GC content. In the study of chromosomal structural rearrangements, we found a lineage specific chromosomal inversion pattern in N. tetrasperma, which indicates that inversions are unlikely to associate with the origin of the suppressed recombination and the mating system transition in N. tetrasperma. The result suggests inversions are the consequences, rather than the causes, of suppressed recombination on the mating-type chromosome of N. tetrasperma. In the final study, analyses of codon usage indicated that the region of suppressed recombination in N. tetrasperma is subjected to genomic degeneration, and selection efficiency has been much reduced in this region. |
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