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Transitions from outcrossing to selfing and from diploidy to polyploidy often co-occur in plants, likely because the ability to produce selfed seed increases the likelihood of newly formed polyploids to become established. An ideal system to study these transitions is Primula, where the shift from diploid, outcrossing progenitors to polyploid, selfing descendants co-occurred repeatedly and the genetic basis of the mating-system shift is known. In Primula, outcrossing is enforced in distylous, typically diploid species characterized by florally heteromorphic, self-incompatible individuals, whereas selfing is enabled in homostylous, typically polyploid species, characterized by florally homomorphic populations of self-compatible plants. Distyly is controlled by the S-locus supergene. Small loss-of-function mutations in the S-locus CYPT gene, which controls style length and female self-incompatibility, are associated with loss of heterostyly in diploid, ancestrally heterostylous Primula species. However, CYPT and the S-locus have never been investigated in interspecific shifts from distylous, diploid species to homostylous, polyploid species. By analyzing the first assembled genome of a homostylous, polyploid species (Primula grandis) in a comparative framework, we discovered two, nearly identical S-locus alleles in the same subgenome, consistent with the hypothesis that the species originated from a cross between a homostylous, diploid pollen donor and a long-styled, diploid pollen recipient. Conformant to theoretical predictions, the macroevolutionary loss of distyly coincided with considerable degeneration of CYPT, including multiple mutations and exon loss, while other S-locus genes remained largely unaffected. This study advances knowledge on the macroevolutionary dynamics of supergenes and genomes in shifts between breeding systems and ploidy levels.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msaf162 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Ecol
September 2025
Department of Environment and Biodiversity, University of Salzburg, Hellbrunner Strasse 34, Salzburg, 5020, Austria.
Polyploidy is an important driver of the evolution and diversification of flowering plants. Several studies have shown that established polyploids differ from diploids in floral morphological traits and that polyploidization directly affects these traits. However, for floral scent, which is key to many plant-pollinator interactions, only a few studies have quantified differences between established cytotypes, and the direct effects of polyploidization on floral scent are not yet known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol
September 2025
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 100101, Beijing, China.
Background: Centromeres are crucial for precise chromosome segregation and maintaining genome stability during cell division. However, their evolutionary dynamics, particularly in polyploid organisms with complex genomic architectures, remain largely enigmatic. Allopolyploid wheat, with its well-defined hierarchical ploidy series and recent polyploidization history, serves as an excellent model to explore centromere evolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Plant Diversity and Specialty Crops, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Science, Wuhan, Hubei, 430074, China.
Trapa L. is a non-cereal aquatic crop with significant economic and ecological value. However, debates over its classification have caused uncertainties in species differentiation and the mechanisms of polyploid speciation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
August 2025
Botany Area, Department of Plant Biology and Ecology, Faculty of Biology, University of Seville, Seville, Spain.
Understanding the relationship between macro- and microevolutionary processes and their delimitation remains a challenge. This review focuses on the role of chromosomal rearrangements in plant population differentiation and lineage diversification resulting in speciation, helping bridge the gap between macro- and microevolution through chromosomal evolution. We focus on angiosperms, a group that comprises the majority of extant plant species diversity and exhibits the largest chromosomal and genomic variations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetics
September 2025
Institute of Ecology and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3FL, United Kingdom.
Recent advances in methods to infer and analyse ancestral recombination graphs (ARGs) are providing powerful new insights in evolutionary biology and beyond. Existing inference approaches tend to be designed for use with fully-phased datasets, and some rely on model assumptions about demography and recombination rate. Here I describe a simple model-free approach for genealogical inference along the genome from unphased genotype data called Sequential Tree Inference by Collecting Compatible Sites (sticcs).
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