Kunjing Qu

and 7 more

Ancient whole-genome duplication (WGD) or polyploidization is prevalent in plants and has played a crucial role in plant adaptation. However, the underlying genomic basis of ecological adaptation and subsequent diversification after WGD are still poorly understood in most plants. Here, we report a chromosome-scale reference genome assembly for the genus Orinus (Orinus kokonorica as representative) and preformed comparative genomics with its closely related genus Cleistogenes (Cleistogenes songorica as representative), both belonging to a newly named subtribe Orininae of the grass subfamily Chloridoideae. The two genera may share one paleo-allotetraploidy event before 10 million years ago, and their two subgenomes display neither fractionation bias nor global homoeolog expression dominance. Recent expansion of transposable elements and enormous contraction in gene families in O. kokonorica have maintained a similar genome size compared to C. songorica. Further comparative genomic analyses reveal substantial genome rearrangements and extensive structural variations (SVs) between the two species. With comparative transcriptomics, we demonstrate that functional innovations of orthologous genes have played an important role in promoting adaptive evolution and diversification of the two genera after polyploidization. In addition, copy number variations in flower and rhizome development related genes and extensive SVs between orthologs may contribute to the morphological differences between the two genera. Our results provide significant new insights into the adaptive evolution and subsequent diversification of the two genera after polyploidization.

Hongyin Hu

and 5 more

Understanding how populations diverge and new species arise is a central question in evolutionary biology. ‘Allopatric’ divergence through geographic isolation is considered to be the commonest mechanism generating species biodiversity in mountainous ecosystems. However, the underlying genomic dynamics, especially genomic islands of elevated divergence and genes that are highly diverged as a result of lineage-specific selection, remain poorly understood. Stellera chamaejasme is widely distributed on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and in adjacent regions, making it a good model with which to explore genomic divergence in mountainous ecosystems. We assembled a high-quality, chromosome-level genome for this species and re-sequenced the genomes of 24 populations across its distributional range. Our population genomic analyses recovered four distinct genetic lineages corresponding to geographic distributions with contrasting environments. However, we revealed that continuous gene flow occurred during the diversification of these four lineages and inter-lineage hybrids, and plastome introgressions were frequently found in regions of contact. The elevated genomic divergences were highly heterogeneous across the genome. The formation of such genomic islands showed neither correlation with rate of gene flow nor relationship to time of divergence. The lineage-specific positively selected genes potentially involved in local adaptation were found both within and outside genomic islands. Our results suggest that genomic divergence in S. chamaejasme is likely to have been triggered and further maintained by local selection in addition to geographic isolation.