A High Frequency of Chromosomal Duplications in Unicellular Algae Is Compensated by Translational Regulation

Author:

Krasovec Marc1ORCID,Merret Rémy23ORCID,Sanchez Frédéric1,Sanchez-Brosseau Sophie1,Piganeau Gwenaël1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CNRS, Biologie Intégrative des Organismes Marins, UMR7232, Sorbonne Universités , Banyuls/Mer , France

2. Laboratoire Génome et Développement des Plantes, UMR5096, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique , Perpignan , France

3. Laboratoire Génome et Développement des Plantes, UMR5096, Université de Perpignan Via Domitia , Perpignan , France

Abstract

AbstractAlthough duplications have long been recognized as a fundamental process driving major evolutionary innovations, direct estimates of spontaneous chromosome duplication rates, leading to aneuploid karyotypes, are scarce. Here, from mutation accumulation (MA) experiments, we provide the first estimates of spontaneous chromosome duplication rates in six unicellular eukaryotic species, which range from 1 × 10−4 to 1 × 10−3 per genome per generation. Although this is ∼5 to ∼60 times less frequent than spontaneous point mutations per genome, chromosome duplication events can affect 1–7% of the total genome size. In duplicated chromosomes, mRNA levels reflected gene copy numbers, but the level of translation estimated by polysome profiling revealed that dosage compensation must be occurring. In particular, one duplicated chromosome showed a 2.1-fold increase of mRNA but translation rates were decreased to 0.7-fold. Altogether, our results support previous observations of chromosome-dependent dosage compensation effects, providing evidence that compensation occurs during translation. We hypothesize that an unknown posttranscriptional mechanism modulates the translation of hundreds of transcripts from genes located on duplicated regions in eukaryotes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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