Abstract

BackgroundMutations often accompany DNA replication. Since there may be fewer cell cycles per year in the germlines of long-lived than short-lived angiosperms, the genomes of long-lived angiosperms may be diverging more slowly than those of short-lived angiosperms. Here we test this hypothesis.ResultsWe first constructed a genetic map for walnut, a woody perennial. All linkage groups were short, and recombination rates were greatly reduced in the centromeric regions. We then used the genetic map to construct a walnut bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone-based physical map, which contained 15,203 exonic BAC-end sequences, and quantified with it synteny between the walnut genome and genomes of three long-lived woody perennials, Vitis vinifera, Populus trichocarpa, and Malus domestica, and three short-lived herbs, Cucumis sativus, Medicago truncatula, and Fragaria vesca. Each measure of synteny we used showed that the genomes of woody perennials were less diverged from the walnut genome than those of herbs. We also estimated the nucleotide substitution rate at silent codon positions in the walnut lineage. It was one-fifth and one-sixth of published nucleotide substitution rates in the Medicago and Arabidopsis lineages, respectively. We uncovered a whole-genome duplication in the walnut lineage, dated it to the neighborhood of the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, and allocated the 16 walnut chromosomes into eight homoeologous pairs. We pointed out that during polyploidy-dysploidy cycles, the dominant tendency is to reduce the chromosome number.ConclusionSlow rates of nucleotide substitution are accompanied by slow rates of synteny erosion during genome divergence in woody perennials.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-1906-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Markers that segregated in Chandler and were homozygous in Idaho were used in the construction of the genetic map

  • We manually examined the consistency of the order of the markers along each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) contig and along the genetic map and edited problematic contigs

  • The map was de facto a female backcross map, and it is possible that a low recombination rate in the female was the cause of short linkage groups (LG), since sex-related differences in map lengths are common in plants [46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53]

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Summary

Introduction

Since there may be fewer cell cycles per year in the germlines of long-lived than short-lived angiosperms, the genomes of long-lived angiosperms may be diverging more slowly than those of short-lived angiosperms. The divergence of nucleotide sequences should be related to the number of germline cell divisions per unit of time rather than to time alone [1]. The number of cell divisions in the germline may differ among different species even if their life-cycle lengths were similar due to differences in plant development and reproduction. Contradictory evidence was initially reported [5,6,7,8,9,10] but an extensive study employing related taxa differing in life-cycle lengths provided strong evidence supporting this relationship [11]

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