Endosperm-based incompatibilities in hybrid monkeyflowers

Author:

Kinser Taliesin J.1ORCID,Smith Ronald D.2ORCID,Lawrence Amelia H.1ORCID,Cooley Arielle M.3ORCID,Vallejo-Marín Mario4,Conradi Smith Gregory D.2,Puzey Joshua R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185

2. Department of Applied Science, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185

3. Biology Department, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington 99362

4. Biological and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland FK9 4LA, UK

Abstract

Abstract Endosperm is an angiosperm innovation central to their reproduction whose development, and thus seed viability, is controlled by genomic imprinting, where expression from certain genes is parent-specific. Unsuccessful imprinting has been linked to failed inter-specific and inter-ploidy hybridization. Despite their importance in plant speciation, the underlying mechanisms behind these endosperm-based barriers remain poorly understood. Here, we describe one such barrier between diploid Mimulus guttatus and tetraploid Mimulus luteus. The two parents differ in endosperm DNA methylation, expression dynamics, and imprinted genes. Hybrid seeds suffer from underdeveloped endosperm, reducing viability, or arrested endosperm and seed abortion when M. guttatus or M. luteus is seed parent, respectively, and transgressive methylation and expression patterns emerge. The two inherited M. luteus subgenomes, genetically distinct but epigenetically similar, are expressionally dominant over the M. guttatus genome in hybrid embryos and especially their endosperm, where paternal imprints are perturbed. In aborted seeds, de novo methylation is inhibited, potentially owing to incompatible paternal instructions of imbalanced dosage from M. guttatus imprints. We suggest that diverged epigenetic/regulatory landscapes between parental genomes induce epigenetic repatterning and global shifts in expression, which, in endosperm, may uniquely facilitate incompatible interactions between divergent imprinting schemes, potentially driving rapid barriers.

Funder

The College of William and Mary Research Award

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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