Deep learning can predict subgenome dominance in ancient but not in neo/synthetic polyploidized genomes

Author:

Guo Zhongwei1,Zhang Kang1,Cai Chengcheng1ORCID,Li Xing1,Zhang Lingkui1,Yang Yinqing1,Wang Xiang1,Chen Shumin1,Zhang Lei1,Cheng Feng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Vegetable Biobreeding, Key Laboratory of Biology and Genetic Improvement of Horticultural Crops of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Institute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

SUMMARYDeep learning offers new approaches to investigate the mechanisms underlying complex biological phenomena, such as subgenome dominance. Subgenome dominance refers to the dominant expression and/or biased fractionation of genes in one subgenome of allopolyploids, which has shaped the evolution of a large group of plants. However, the underlying cause of subgenome dominance remains elusive. Here, we adopt deep learning to construct two convolutional neural network (CNN) models, binary expression model (BEM) and homoeolog contrast model (HCM), to investigate the mechanism underlying subgenome dominance using DNA sequence and methylation sites. We apply these CNN models to analyze three representative polyploidization systems, Brassica, Gossypium, and Cucurbitaceae, each with available ancient and neo/synthetic polyploidized genomes. The BEM shows that DNA sequence of the promoter region can accurately predict whether a gene is expressed or not. More importantly, the HCM shows that the DNA sequence of the promoter region predicts dominant expression status between homoeologous gene pairs retained from ancient polyploidizations, thus predicting subgenome dominance associated with these events. However, HCM fails to predict gene expression dominance between new homoeologous gene pairs arising from the neo/synthetic polyploidizations. These results are consistent across the three plant polyploidization systems, indicating broad applicability of our models. Furthermore, the two models based on methylation sites produce similar results. These results show that subgenome dominance is associated with long‐term sequence differentiation between the promoters of homoeologs, suggesting that subgenome expression dominance precedes and is the driving force or even the determining factor for sequence divergence between subgenomes following polyploidization.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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