Genome Size Changes by Duplication, Divergence, and Insertion inCaenorhabditisWorms

Author:

Adams Paula E12,Eggers Victoria K3,Millwood Joshua D1,Sutton John M14,Pienaar Jason35,Fierst Janna L36ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Alabama , Tuscaloosa, AL , USA

2. Current address: Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University , Auburn, AL , USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University , Miami, FL , USA

4. Current address: Absci , Vancouver, WA , USA

5. Institute of the Environment , Miami, FL , USA

6. Biomolecular Sciences Institute , Miami, FL , USA

Abstract

AbstractGenome size has been measurable since the 1940s but we still do not understand genome size variation. Caenorhabditis nematodes show strong conservation of chromosome number but vary in genome size between closely related species. Androdioecy, where populations are composed of males and self-fertile hermaphrodites, evolved from outcrossing, female-male dioecy, three times in this group. In Caenorhabditis, androdioecious genomes are 10–30% smaller than dioecious species, but in the nematode Pristionchus, androdioecy evolved six times and does not correlate with genome size. Previous hypotheses include genome size evolution through: 1) Deletions and “genome shrinkage” in androdioecious species; 2) Transposable element (TE) expansion and DNA loss through large deletions (the “accordion model”); and 3) Differing TE dynamics in androdioecious and dioecious species. We analyzed nematode genomes and found no evidence for these hypotheses. Instead, nematode genome sizes had strong phylogenetic inertia with increases in a few dioecious species, contradicting the “genome shrinkage” hypothesis. TEs did not explain genome size variation with the exception of the DNA transposon Mutator which was twice as abundant in dioecious genomes. Across short and long evolutionary distances Caenorhabditis genomes evolved through small structural mutations including gene-associated duplications and insertions. Seventy-one protein families had significant, parallel decreases across androdioecious Caenorhabditis including genes involved in the sensory system, regulatory proteins and membrane-associated immune responses. Our results suggest that within a dynamic landscape of frequent small rearrangements in Caenorhabditis, reproductive mode mediates genome evolution by altering the precise fates of individual genes, proteins, and the phenotypes they underlie.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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