Origin, loss, and regain of self-incompatibility in angiosperms

Author:

Zhao Hong12ORCID,Zhang Yue12ORCID,Zhang Hui3ORCID,Song Yanzhai12ORCID,Zhao Fei24ORCID,Zhang Yu’e1ORCID,Zhu Sihui25ORCID,Zhang Hongkui25ORCID,Zhou Zhendiao25ORCID,Guo Han12ORCID,Li Miaomiao12ORCID,Li Junhui12ORCID,Gao Qiang1ORCID,Han Qianqian12ORCID,Huang Huaqiu12ORCID,Copsey Lucy6ORCID,Li Qun1ORCID,Chen Hua25ORCID,Coen Enrico6ORCID,Zhang Yijing247ORCID,Xue Yongbiao1258ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Plant Cell and Chromosome Engineering, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, and the Innovation Academy of Seed Design, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China

3. College of Life Science, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, China

4. National Key Laboratory of Plant Molecular Genetics, CAS Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200032, China

5. Beijing Institute of Genomics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and China National Centre for Bioinformation, Beijing 100101, China

6. John Innes Centre, Norwich NR47UH, UK

7. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, Collaborative Innovation Center of Genetics and Development, Department of Biochemistry, Institute of Plant Biology, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200438, China

8. Jiangsu Co-Innovation Center for Modern Production Technology of Grain Crops, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou 225009, China

Abstract

Abstract The self-incompatibility (SI) system with the broadest taxonomic distribution in angiosperms is based on multiple S-locus F-box genes (SLFs) tightly linked to an S-RNase termed type-1. Multiple SLFs collaborate to detoxify nonself S-RNases while being unable to detoxify self S-RNases. However, it is unclear how such a system evolved, because in an ancestral system with a single SLF, many nonself S-RNases would not be detoxified, giving low cross-fertilization rates. In addition, how the system has been maintained in the face of whole-genome duplications (WGDs) or lost in other lineages remains unclear. Here we show that SLFs from a broad range of species can detoxify S-RNases from Petunia with a high detoxification probability, suggestive of an ancestral feature enabling cross-fertilization and subsequently modified as additional SLFs evolved. We further show, based on its genomic signatures, that type-1 was likely maintained in many lineages, despite WGD, through deletion of duplicate S-loci. In other lineages, SI was lost either through S-locus deletions or by retaining duplications. Two deletion lineages regained SI through type-2 (Brassicaceae) or type-4 (Primulaceae), and one duplication lineage through type-3 (Papaveraceae) mechanisms. Thus, our results reveal a highly dynamic process behind the origin, maintenance, loss, and regain of SI.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Strategic Priority Research Program of the CAS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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