Gene duplication is the primary driver of intraspecific genomic divergence in coral algal symbionts

Author:

Shah Sarah1ORCID,Dougan Katherine E.1ORCID,Chen Yibi1ORCID,Bhattacharya Debashish2ORCID,Chan Cheong Xin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, and Australian Centre for Ecogenomics, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, 4072 Queensland, Australia

2. Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

Abstract

Dinoflagellates in the order Suessiales include the family Symbiodiniaceae, which have essential roles as photosymbionts in corals, and their cold-adapted sister group, Polarella glacialis . These diverse taxa exhibit extensive genomic divergence, although their genomes are relatively small (haploid size < 3 Gbp) when compared with most other free-living dinoflagellates. Different strains of Symbiodiniaceae form symbiosis with distinct hosts and exhibit different regimes of gene expression, but intraspecific whole-genome divergence is poorly understood. Focusing on three Symbiodiniaceae species (the free-living Effrenium voratum and the symbiotic Symbiodinium microadriaticum and Durusdinium trenchii ) and the free-living outgroup P. glacialis , for which whole-genome data from multiple isolates are available, we assessed intraspecific genomic divergence with respect to sequence and structure. Our analysis, based on alignment and alignment-free methods, revealed a greater extent of intraspecific sequence divergence in Symbiodiniaceae than in P. glacialis . Our results underscore the role of gene duplication in generating functional innovation, with a greater prevalence of tandemly duplicated single-exon genes observed in the genomes of free-living species than in symbionts. These results demonstrate the remarkable intraspecific genomic divergence in dinoflagellates under the constraint of reduced genome sizes, shaped by genetic duplications and symbiogenesis events during the diversification of Symbiodiniaceae.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Australian Academy of Science

University of Queensland

National Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology,General Neuroscience

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