Comparative genome anatomy reveals evolutionary insights into a unique amphitriploid fish

Yang Wang, Xi Yin Li, Wen Jie Xu, Kun Wang, Bin Wu, Meng Xu, Yan Chen, Li Jun Miao, Zhong Wei Wang, Zhi Li, Xiao Juan Zhang, Zhan Yin, Bo Tong Zhou, Yu Lan Yang, Cheng Long Zhu, Ming Liang Hu, Jiang Ming Zheng, Chen Guang Feng, Qiang Qiu, Le Tian TianMeng Lu, Fang Peng, Wei Jia Lu, Jin Feng Tong, Jin Gou Tong, Bei De Fu, Peng Yu, Miao Ding, Rui Hai Gan, Qin Qin Zhang, Jian Bo Jian, Chi Zhang, Wei Ming He, Wei Yang, Zi Cheng Zhao, Qian Qian Zhang, Qiang Gao, Jun Yang Xu, Ming Zhou Bai, Ya Ping Zhang, Huan Ming Yang, Xiao Dong Fang, Wen Wang, Li Zhou, Jian Fang Gui

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Scopus citations

Abstract

Triploids are rare in nature because of difficulties in meiotic and gametogenic processes, especially in vertebrates. The Carassius complex of cyprinid teleosts contains sexual tetraploid crucian carp/goldfish (C. auratus) and unisexual hexaploid gibel carp/Prussian carp (C. gibelio) lineages, providing a valuable model for studying the evolution and maintenance mechanism of unisexual polyploids in vertebrates. Here we sequence the genomes of the two species and assemble their haplotypes, which contain two subgenomes (A and B), to the chromosome level. Sequencing coverage analysis reveals that C. gibelio is an amphitriploid (AAABBB) with two triploid sets of chromosomes; each set is derived from a different ancestor. Resequencing data from different strains of C. gibelio show that unisexual reproduction has been maintained for over 0.82 million years. Comparative genomics show intensive expansion and alterations of meiotic cell cycle-related genes and an oocyte-specific histone variant. Cytological assays indicate that C. gibelio produces unreduced oocytes by an alternative ameiotic pathway; however, sporadic homologous recombination and a high rate of gene conversion also exist in C. gibelio. These genomic changes might have facilitated purging deleterious mutations and maintaining genome stability in this unisexual amphitriploid fish. Overall, the current results provide novel insights into the evolutionary mechanisms of the reproductive success in unisexual polyploid vertebrates.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1354-1366
Number of pages13
JournalNature Ecology and Evolution
Volume6
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2022

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