Summary Eukaryotic genomes harbor many forms of variation, including nucleotide diversity and structural polymorphisms, which experience natural selection and contribute to genome evolution and biodiversity. However, harnessing this variation for agriculture hinges on our ability to detect, quantify, catalog, and utilize genetic diversity.Here, we explore seven complete genomes of the emerging biofuel crop pennycress (Thlaspi arvense) drawn from across the species’s current genetic diversity to catalogue variation in genome structure and content.Across this new pangenome resource, we find contrasting evolutionary modes in different genomic regions. Gene-poor, repeat-rich pericentromeric regions experience frequent rearrangements, including repeated centromere repositioning. In contrast, conserved gene-dense chromosome arms maintain large-scale synteny across accessions, even in fast-evolving immune genes where microsynteny breaks down across species but the macrosynteny of gene cluster positioning is maintained.Our findings highlight that multiple elements of the genome experience dynamic evolution that conserves functional content on the chromosome scale but allows rearrangement and presence-absence variation on a local scale. This diversity is invisible to classical reference-based approaches and highlights the strength and utility of pangenomic resources. These results provide a valuable case study of rapid genomic structural evolution within a species and powerful resources for crop development in an emerging biofuel crop.
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Mitogenomic architecture and evolution of the soil ciliates Colpoda
Colpoda, one of the most widespread ciliated protozoa in soil, are poorly understood in regard to their genetics and evolution. Our research revealed extreme mitochondrial gene rearrangements dominated by gene loss events, potentially leading to the streamlining ofColpodamitogenomes. Surprisingly, while interspecific rearrangements abound, our population-level mitogenomic study revealed a conserved gene order within species, offering a potential new identification criterion. Phylogenomic analysis traced their lineage over 326 million years, revealing two distinct groups. Substantial genomic divergence might be associated with the lack of extended collinear blocks and relaxed purifying selection. This study systematically revealsColpodaciliate mitogenome structures and evolution, providing insights into the survival and evolution of these vital soil microorganisms.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1927159
- PAR ID:
- 10539945
- Editor(s):
- Gilbert, Jack A
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Society for Microbiology
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- mSystems
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 2
- ISSN:
- 2379-5077
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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