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Comparative genomics reveals insight into the evolutionary origin of massively scrambled genomes.


ABSTRACT: Ciliates are microbial eukaryotes that undergo extensive programmed genome rearrangement, a natural genome editing process that converts long germline chromosomes into smaller gene-rich somatic chromosomes. Three well-studied ciliates include Oxytricha trifallax, Tetrahymena thermophila, and Paramecium tetraurelia, but only the Oxytricha lineage has a massively scrambled genome, whose assembly during development requires hundreds of thousands of precisely programmed DNA joining events, representing the most complex genome dynamics of any known organism. Here we study the emergence of such complex genomes by examining the origin and evolution of discontinuous and scrambled genes in the Oxytricha lineage. This study compares six genomes from three species, the germline and somatic genomes for Euplotes woodruffi, Tetmemena sp., and the model ciliate O. trifallax. We sequenced, assembled, and annotated the germline and somatic genomes of E. woodruffi, which provides an outgroup, and the germline genome of Tetmemena sp. We find that the germline genome of Tetmemena is as massively scrambled and interrupted as Oxytricha's: 13.6% of its gene loci require programmed translocations and/or inversions, with some genes requiring hundreds of precise gene editing events during development. This study revealed that the earlier diverged spirotrich, E. woodruffi, also has a scrambled genome, but only roughly half as many loci (7.3%) are scrambled. Furthermore, its scrambled genes are less complex, together supporting the position of Euplotes as a possible evolutionary intermediate in this lineage, in the process of accumulating complex evolutionary genome rearrangements, all of which require extensive repair to assemble functional coding regions. Comparative analysis also reveals that scrambled loci are often associated with local duplications, supporting a gradual model for the origin of complex, scrambled genomes via many small events of DNA duplication and decay.

SUBMITTER: Feng Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9797194 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Comparative genomics reveals insight into the evolutionary origin of massively scrambled genomes.

Feng Yi Y   Neme Rafik R   Beh Leslie Y LY   Chen Xiao X   Braun Jasper J   Lu Michael W MW   Landweber Laura F LF  

eLife 20221124


Ciliates are microbial eukaryotes that undergo extensive programmed genome rearrangement, a natural genome editing process that converts long germline chromosomes into smaller gene-rich somatic chromosomes. Three well-studied ciliates include <i>Oxytricha trifallax</i>, <i>Tetrahymena thermophila,</i> and <i>Paramecium tetraurelia</i>, but only the <i>Oxytricha</i> lineage has a massively scrambled genome, whose assembly during development requires hundreds of thousands of precisely programmed D  ...[more]

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