Genomic analyses of the Linum distyly supergene reveal convergent evolution at the molecular level
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Cell Press
Date
2022-10-24Referencia bibliográfica
Juanita Gutiérrez-Valencia... [et al.]. Genomic analyses of the Linum distyly supergene reveal convergent evolution at the molecular level, Current Biology, Volume 32, Issue 20, 2022, Pages 4360-4371.e6, ISSN 0960-9822, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.08.042]
Patrocinador
European Research Council (ERC) 757451 Swedish Research Council European Commission; Bergstroms foundation Carl Tryggers grant Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation as part of the National Bioinformatics Infrastructure Sweden at SciLifeLab; National Genomics Infrastructure (NGI) in Stockholm and Uppsala (Uppsala Genome Center, SNP&SEQ) - Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation; Science for Life Laboratory; Swedish Research Council; European Commission 2018-05973; NBIS (National Bioinformatics Infrastructure Sweden)Résumé
Supergenes govern multi-trait-balanced polymorphisms in a wide range of systems; however, our understanding
of their origins and evolution remains incomplete. The reciprocal placement of stigmas and anthers
in pin and thrum floral morphs of distylous species constitutes an iconic example of a balanced polymorphism
governed by a supergene, the distyly S-locus. Recent studies have shown that the Primula and
Turnera distyly supergenes are both hemizygous in thrums, but it remains unknown whether hemizygosity
is pervasive among distyly S-loci. As hemizygosity has major consequences for supergene evolution and
loss, clarifying whether this genetic architecture is shared among distylous species is critical. Here, we
have characterized the genetic architecture and evolution of the distyly supergene in Linum by generating
a chromosome-level genome assembly of Linum tenue, followed by the identification of the S-locus using
population genomic data. We show that hemizygosity and thrum-specific expression of S-linked genes,
including a pistil-expressed candidate gene for style length, are major features of the Linum S-locus.
Structural variation is likely instrumental for recombination suppression, and although the non-recombining
dominant haplotype has accumulated transposable elements, S-linked genes are not under relaxed purifying
selection. Our findings reveal remarkable convergence in the genetic architecture and evolution of independently
derived distyly supergenes, provide a counterexample to classic inversion-based supergenes, and
shed new light on the origin and maintenance of an iconic floral polymorphism.