Author:
Mohn Rebekah A.,Zenil-Ferguson Rosana,Krueger Thilo A.,Fleischmann Andreas S.,Cross Adam T.,Yang Ya
Abstract
AbstractChromosome number change is a driver of speciation in eukaryotic organisms. Carnivorous sundews, the plant genusDroseraL., exhibit single chromosome number variation among and within species, especially in the AustralianDroserasubg.ErgaleiumD.C., potentially linked to the presence of holocentromeres. We reviewed literature, verified chromosome counts, and using anrbcL chronogram, tested alternate models where the gain, loss, and doubling rates (+1, −1, ×2) were the same or different betweenD. subg.Ergaleiumand the other subgenera. Ancestral chromosome number estimations were performed, and the distributions of self-compatibility and genome size were visualized across the genus. The best model for chromosome evolution had equal rates of polyploidy (0.014 per million years; Myr) but higher rates of single chromosome number gain (0.19 and 0.027 per Myr) and loss (0.23 and 0.00059 per Myr) inD. subg.Ergaleiumcompared to the other subgenera. We found no evidence for differences in single chromosome evolution to be due to differences in diploidization after polyploidy or to holocentromeres as had been proposed. This study highlights the complexity of factors influencing rates of chromosome number evolution.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference75 articles.
1. Polyploid plants have faster rates of multivariate niche differentiation than their diploid relatives;Ecology Letters,2019
2. The Cytology and Morphology of Drosera slackii and Its Relatives in South Africa
3. Meiotic drive shapes rates of karyotype evolution in mammals
4. BEAST 2: A Software Platform for Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis
5. Holokinetic drive: centromere drive in chromosomes without centromeres;Evolution,2014