Back to Search Start Over

The subgenomes show asymmetric expression of alleles in hybrid lineages of Megalobrama amblycephala × Culter alburnus

Authors :
Wuhui Li
Jing Wang
Kaikun Luo
Fengming Han
Jun Xiao
Wei Duan
Zhong Wan
Yuqin Shu
Rurong Zhao
Min Liu
Fangzhou Hu
Qinfeng Liu
He Dai
Xuming Li
Li Ren
Jia Liu
Guiming Liu
Rong Zhou
Guoliang Wang
Qinbo Qin
Hongkun Zheng
Xin Gao
Chang Wu
Jiaming Li
Conghui Yang
Shaojun Liu
Yude Wang
Shi Wang
Xiaojing Yan
Jialin Cui
Chun Zhang
Min Tao
Chenchen Tang
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2019.

Abstract

Hybridization drives rapid speciation by shaping novel genotypic and phenotypic profiles. Genomic incompatibility and transcriptome shock have been observed in hybrids, although this is rarer in animals than in plants. Using the newly sequenced genomes of the blunt snout bream (Megalobrama amblycephala [BSB]) and the topmouth culter (Culter alburnus [TC]), we focused on the sequence variation and gene expression changes in the reciprocal intergeneric hybrid lineages (F1–F3) of BSB × TC. A genome-wide transcriptional analysis identified 145–974 expressed recombinant genes in the successive generations of hybrid fish, suggesting the rapid emergence of allelic variation following hybridization. Some gradual changes of gene expression with additive and dominance effects and various cis and trans regulations were observed from F1 to F3 in the two hybrid lineages. These asymmetric patterns of gene expression represent the alternative strategies for counteracting deleterious effects of the subgenomes and improving adaptability of novel hybrids. Furthermore, we identified positive selection and additive expression patterns in transforming growth factor, beta 1b (tgfb1b), which may account for the morphological variations of the pharyngeal jaw in the two hybrid lineages. Our current findings provide insights into the evolution of vertebrate genomes immediately following hybridization.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e61cd4fcd0869d599f13f703ceb8ad66