Abstract

Polyploidy, a state in which the chromosome complement has undergone an increase, is a major force in evolution. Understanding the consequences of polyploidy has received much attention, and allopolyploids, which result from the union of two different parental genomes, are of particular interest because they must overcome a suite of biological responses to this merger, known as “genome shock.” A key question is what happens to gene expression of the two gene copies following allopolyploidization, but until recently the tools to answer this question on a genome-wide basis were lacking. Here we utilize high throughput transcriptome sequencing to produce the first genome-wide picture of gene expression response to allopolyploidy in fungi. A novel pipeline for assigning sequence reads to the gene copies was used to quantify their expression in a fungal allopolyploid. We find that the transcriptional response to allopolyploidy is predominantly conservative: both copies of most genes are retained; over half the genes inherit parental gene expression patterns; and parental differential expression is often lost in the allopolyploid. Strikingly, the patterns of gene expression change are highly concordant with the genome-wide expression results of a cotton allopolyploid. The very different nature of these two allopolyploids implies a conserved, eukaryote-wide transcriptional response to genome merger. We provide evidence that the transcriptional responses we observe are mostly driven by intrinsic differences between the regulatory systems in the parent species, and from this propose a mechanistic model in which the cross-kingdom conservation in transcriptional response reflects conservation of the mutational processes underlying eukaryotic gene regulatory evolution. This work provides a platform to develop a universal understanding of gene expression response to allopolyploidy and suggests that allopolyploids are an exceptional system to investigate gene regulatory changes that have evolved in the parental species prior to allopolyploidization.

Highlights

  • Polyploidization refers to events that result in a sudden increase in the number of chromosome sets carried by an organism

  • A key question is what happens to expression of the two parental gene copies following genome merger

  • We focused on a fungal allopolyploid from a group that dominates many of the world’s pastoral economies

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Summary

Introduction

Polyploidization refers to events that result in a sudden increase in the number of chromosome sets carried by an organism. There are two classes of polyploidization: autopolyploidy is the duplication of a genome; while allopolyploidy is caused by interspecific hybridization between different species or genera resulting in the union of two or more dissimilar genomes. Such allopolyploids are often ecologically competitive, in many cases showing improved adaptability relative to parental species [10]. This is thought to arise from masking of deleterious mutations, fixed heterosis (‘hybrid vigor’), and/or greater evolutionary plasticity resulting from the duplicated gene copies [11,12,13]

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