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A physical map for the Amborella trichopoda genome sheds light on the evolution of angiosperm genome structure

Authors :
James C. Estill
Douglas E. Soltis
Kristi Collura
Zhiyong Xiong
Hong Ma
Andrea Zuccolo
Jody A. Banks
Dina F. Mandoli
John E. Bowers
Pamela S. Soltis
Yuannian Jiao
Andrew H. Paterson
Victor A. Albert
John E. Carlson
Haibao Tang
Steve Rounsley
Yeisoo Yu
Meizhong Luo
Rod A. Wing
Aswathy Sebastian
Jill M. Duarte
André S. Chanderbali
Dave Kudrna
J. C. Pires
Jose Luis Goicoechea
Srikar Chamala
Jim Leebens-Mack
Jeffrey P. Tomkins
Claude W. dePamphilis
Saravanaraj Ayyampalayam
Brad Barbazuk
Source :
Genome Biology
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background Recent phylogenetic analyses have identified Amborella trichopoda, an understory tree species endemic to the forests of New Caledonia, as sister to a clade including all other known flowering plant species. The Amborella genome is a unique reference for understanding the evolution of angiosperm genomes because it can serve as an outgroup to root comparative analyses. A physical map, BAC end sequences and sample shotgun sequences provide a first view of the 870 Mbp Amborella genome. Results Analysis of Amborella BAC ends sequenced from each contig suggests that the density of long terminal repeat retrotransposons is negatively correlated with that of protein coding genes. Syntenic, presumably ancestral, gene blocks were identified in comparisons of the Amborella BAC contigs and the sequenced Arabidopsis thaliana, Populus trichocarpa, Vitis vinifera and Oryza sativa genomes. Parsimony mapping of the loss of synteny corroborates previous analyses suggesting that the rate of structural change has been more rapid on lineages leading to Arabidopsis and Oryza compared with lineages leading to Populus and Vitis. The gamma paleohexiploidy event identified in the Arabidopsis, Populus and Vitis genomes is shown to have occurred after the divergence of all other known angiosperms from the lineage leading to Amborella. Conclusions When placed in the context of a physical map, BAC end sequences representing just 5.4% of the Amborella genome have facilitated reconstruction of gene blocks that existed in the last common ancestor of all flowering plants. The Amborella genome is an invaluable reference for inferences concerning the ancestral angiosperm and subsequent genome evolution.

Details

ISSN :
1474760X
Volume :
12
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce91a4f94f6cbb343871e82c712e0333