Polymorphism and concerted evolution in a tandemly repeated gene family: 5S ribosomal DNA in diploid and allopolyploid cottons.

Publication Overview
TitlePolymorphism and concerted evolution in a tandemly repeated gene family: 5S ribosomal DNA in diploid and allopolyploid cottons.
AuthorsCronn RC; Zhao X; Paterson AH; Wendel JF
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of Molecular Evolution
Volume42
Issue(6)
Year1996
Page(s)685 705
Publication CodeJME-42-685

Abstract

5S RNA genes and their nontranscribed spacers are tandemly repeated in plant genomes at one or more chromosomal loci. To facilitate an understanding of the forces that govern 5S rDNA evolution, copy-number estimation and DNA sequencing were conducted for a phylogenetically well-characterized set of 16 diploid species of cotton (Gossypium) and 4 species representing allopolyploid derivatives of the diploids. Copy number varies over twentyfold in the genus, from approximately 1,000 to 20,000 copies/2C genome. When superimposed on the organismal phylogeny, these data reveal examples of both array expansion and contraction. Across species, a mean of 12\\% of nucleotide positions are polymorphic within individual arrays, for both gene and spacer sequences. This shows, in conjunction with phylogenetic evidence for ancestral polymorphisms that survive speciation events, that intralocus concerted evolutionary forces are relatively weak and that the rate of interrepeat homogenizationis approximately equal to the rate of speciation. Evidence presented also shows that duplicated 5S rDNA arrays in allopolyploids have retained their subgenomic identity since polyploid formation, thereby indicating that interlocus concerted evolution has not been an important factor in the evolution of these arrays. A descriptive model, one which incorporates the opposing forces of mutation and homogenization within a selective framework, is outlined to account for the empirical data presented. Weak homogenizing forces allow equivalent levels of sequence, polymorphism to accumulate in the 5S gene and spacer sequences, but fixation of mutations is nearly prohibited in the 5S gene. As a consequence, fixed interspecific differences are statistically underrepresented for 5S genes. This result explains the apparent paradox that despite similar levels of gene and spacer diversity, phylogenetic analysis of spacer sequences yields highly resolved trees, whereas analyses based on 5Sgene sequences do not.
Germplasm
This publication contains information about 3 stocks:
Stock NameGRIN IDSpeciesType
(AD)4-JLGossypium mustelinumaccession
BeasleyGossypium arboreum x thurberi [polyploid]accession
D11-JMSGossypium schwendimaniiaccession
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Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
pISSN0022-2844
eISSN1432-1432
Journal CodeJME
PublisherSpringer-Verlag.
Published LocationGermany
Publication CodeJME-42-685
LanguageEnglish
Keywordsgossypium; gossypium hirsutum; gossypium barbadense; diploidy; polyploidy; ribosomal dna; ribosomal rna; genes; phylogeny; evolution; nucleotide sequences; multigene families; genetic polymorphism; repetitive dna; wild plants; species differences; multigene family; repetitive sequences