Abstract

Self-splicing introns populate several highly conserved protein-coding genes in fungal and plant mitochondria. In fungi, many of these introns have retained their ability to spread to intron-free target sites, often assisted by intron-encoded endonucleases that initiate the homing process. Here, leveraging population genomic data from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and Lachancea kluyveri, we expose nonrandom patterns of genetic diversity in exons that border self-splicing introns. In particular, we show that, in all three species, the density of single nucleotide polymorphisms increases as one approaches a mobile intron. Through multiple lines of evidence, we rule out relaxed purifying selection as the cause of uneven nucleotide diversity. Instead, our findings implicate intron mobility as a direct driver of host gene diversity. We discuss two mechanistic scenarios that are consistent with the data: either endonuclease activity and subsequent error-prone repair have left a mutational footprint on the insertion environment of mobile introns or nonrandom patterns of genetic diversity are caused by exonic coconversion, which occurs when introns spread to empty target sites via homologous recombination. Importantly, however, we show that exonic coconversion can only explain diversity gradients near intron-exon boundaries if the conversion template comes from outside the population. In other words, there must be pervasive and ongoing horizontal gene transfer of self-splicing introns into extant fungal populations.

Highlights

  • Self-splicing introns populate several highly conserved protein-coding genes in fungal and plant mitochondria

  • Elevated polymorphism density at the exonic boundaries of mitochondrial introns The S. cerevisiae mitochondrial reference genome harbors a single group I intron in the 21S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene and multiple group I and II introns in the protein-coding genes cob and cox1 (Figure 1A)

  • Whereas strong constraints on RNA structure and base pairing govern the evolution of transfer RNA (tRNA) and rRNA genes throughout most of their sequence, protein-coding genes contain synonymous sites that might in principle allow for a better mutational readout, at short evolutionary time scales

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Summary

Introduction

Self-splicing introns populate several highly conserved protein-coding genes in fungal and plant mitochondria. In search of such an imprint, we survey recent high-quality population genomic data from S. cerevisiae, S. pombe, and L. kluyveri to characterize single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) patterns in exons flanking mitochondrial self-splicing introns.

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