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Evolutionary stability of genetic dominance in the Brassicaceae self-incompatibility system
Stockholm University, Faculty of Science, Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences. Stockholm University, Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab).ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7212-813X
Stockholm University, Faculty of Science, Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences. Stockholm University, Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab).ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7378-4673
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(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

The question of whether dominance-recessivity relationships between associated alleles in a diploid genotype can evolve independently from the activity of the gene products encoded has been a hot topic in evolutionary genetics throughout the 20th century. In hermaphroditic plants of the Brassicaceae family, the self-incompatibility locus (S-locus) confers the ability to recognize and reject self-pollen. Dominance relationships between self-incompatibility alleles (S-alleles) in pollen are governed by small RNA (sRNA) transcriptional regulators produced by dominant S-alleles and their target sites on recessive S-alleles. These regulators and their target sites segregate together with but are distinct from the genes encoding self-recognition specificities themselves, providing the opportunity for dominance to evolve independently from the recognition specificities. Dominance interactions between the many segregating S-alleles have been described in the distantly related Arabidopsis and Brassica, but little is known about the evolutionary stability of the dominance networks given that divergent sets of S-alleles are segregating in these two genera. In this study, we take advantage of the extensive trans-specific sharing of S-haplotypes between the self-incompatible species Capsella grandiflora and Arabidopsis halleri to investigate the conservation of S-locus dominance relationships across their approximately 8 million years of divergence. For this purpose, we use a combination of controlled crosses and full-length long-read sequencing of S-haplotypes. We find that the dominance network among six C. grandiflora S-alleles has a largely parallel structure to that among their orthologous S-alleles in A. halleri. We test the theoretical prediction that dominant S-alleles should be found at lower population frequencies using a large sample of a natural C. grandiflora population. Finally, we test whether dominant C. grandiflora S-alleles show increased accumulation of repeats (TEs) than recessive S-alleles, as expected due to their lower chance of recombination and lower effective population sizes. Our results contribute to an improved understanding of the maintenance of dominance relationships at loci under balancing selection.

Keywords [en]
Self-incompatibility, dominance, Capsella, Arabidopsis, SCR, sRNA
National Category
Evolutionary Biology Genetics and Genomics
Research subject
Ecology and Evolution
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-179374OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-179374DiVA, id: diva2:1415303
Funder
Science for Life Laboratory - a national resource center for high-throughput molecular bioscienceSwedish Research Council, 621-2013-4320EU, European Research Council, 648321Available from: 2020-03-18 Created: 2020-03-18 Last updated: 2025-02-01Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Evolutionary consequences of dominance at the Brassicaceae self-incompatibility locus
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Evolutionary consequences of dominance at the Brassicaceae self-incompatibility locus
2020 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetic mechanism that allows plants to enforce outcrossing by rejecting self-pollen and pollen from close relatives. In the Brassicaceae, SI is sporophytic and controlled by the self-incompatibility locus (S-locus). The S-locus harbors two tightly linked genes SRK and SCR, which encode the female and male SI specificity determinants, respectively. S-locus heterozygotes often only express the S-specificity of the more dominant allele, and at the pollen level such dominance relationships are mediated by small RNAs (sRNAs). The S-locus is thus an example of a locus under strong balancing selection, where dominance modifiers have evolved.

In this thesis, I investigate the consequences of S-locus dominance for plant mating system evolution and allopolyploid speciation. I further investigate evolutionary conservation and sequence-level effects of dominance relationships among S-alleles. For this purpose, I used the crucifer genus Capsella as a model system.

First, I demonstrated that targeted long-read sequencing results in structurally accurate assemblies of full-length S-haplotype sequences, and that indel errors in such assemblies can be corrected using short reads. Second, I investigated the genetic basis of loss of SI, the first step in the evolution of self-fertilisation, in the self-compatible (SC) Capsella orientalis. I found that loss of SI was dominant and mapped to the S-locus, where C. orientalis harbored a fixed coding frameshift deletion in SCR that is likely to lead to loss of male specificity. I further identified a sRNA-based dominance modifier that is associated with dominant suppression of recessive SCR alleles. Taken together, these results suggest that loss of SI in C. orientalis involved a dominant S-haplotype, suggesting that dominant haplotypes may be favored under conditions that select for loss of SI. Third, I show that a dominant S-haplotype may also have contributed to the shift to SC in the widespread allotetraploid Capsella bursa-pastoris. Fourth, I showed that dominance relationships at the S-locus are largely conserved between the SI outcrossing species C. grandiflora and Arabidopsis halleri which diverged ~8 Mya. I also found that dominant S-haplotypes accumulate more transposable elements than recessive S-haplotypes, in line with expected sequence-level consequences of S-locus dominance. In sum, this thesis provides new insights into the broad conservation of dominance hierarchies at the Brassicaceae S-locus, and the role of dominant S-alleles in allopolyploid speciation and plant mating system shifts.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, 2020. p. 50
Keywords
Capsella, mating system shift, self-fertilization, self-incompatibility, small RNA, dominance, Arabidopsis, population genetics, genomics, gene expression
National Category
Evolutionary Biology Genetics and Genomics
Research subject
Ecology and Evolution
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-179377 (URN)978-91-7911-078-9 (ISBN)978-91-7911-079-6 (ISBN)
Public defence
2020-05-15, digitally via video conference (Zoom), public link shared at www.su.se/deep in connection with nailing of the thesis, Stockholm, 13:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Note

At the time of the doctoral defense, the following papers were unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 3: Manuscript. Paper 4: Manuscript.

Available from: 2020-04-22 Created: 2020-03-19 Last updated: 2025-02-01Bibliographically approved

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Bachmann, Jörg A.Tedder, AndrewSlotte, Tanja

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