TY - JOUR
T1 - Phylotranscriptomics Resolves the Phylogeny of Pooideae and Uncovers Factors for Their Adaptive Evolution
AU - Zhang, Lin
AU - Zhu, Xinxin
AU - Zhao, Yiyong
AU - Guo, Jing
AU - Zhang, Taikui
AU - Huang, Weichen
AU - Huang, Jie
AU - Hu, Yi
AU - Huang, Chien Hsun
AU - Ma, Hong
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Lulu Xun, Qingwen Lin, Yang Yang, Wenli Chen, J. Travis Columbus, Yuxing Gu, Fei Ren, Weijie Li, Zhiming Zhong, Detuan Liu, Hailei Zheng, Shuai Liao, Binghua Chen, Liqiong Jiang, and Guangda Tang for help in taxon sampling. We thank Elizabeth A. Kellogg and J. Travis Columbus for help in species identification. We also thank Professors Ji Yang, Zhiping Song, Wenju Zhang, Yuguo Wang, and Ji Qi for discussions. We thank Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, UC Botanical Garden at Berkeley, the New York Botanical Garden, the Missouri Botanical Garden, and the Germplasm Bank of Wild Species at Kunming Institute of Botany for providing materials. We thank Shizhen Qiao for drawing the cartoons (trees, grasses, awn, ovary, and inflorescence) in figure 7. This work was supported by funds from grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31770242 and 31970224) and funds from the State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering and the Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering at Fudan University, and from the Department of Biology and the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences at the Pennsylvania State University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s).
PY - 2022/2/1
Y1 - 2022/2/1
N2 - Adaptation to cool climates has occurred several times in different angiosperm groups. Among them, Pooideae, the largest grass subfamily with ∼3,900 species including wheat and barley, have successfully occupied many temperate regions and play a prominent role in temperate ecosystems. To investigate possible factors contributing to Pooideae adaptive evolution to cooling climates, we performed phylogenetic reconstruction using five gene sets (with 1,234 nuclear genes and their subsets) from 157 transcriptomes/genomes representing all 15 tribes and 24 of 26 subtribes. Our phylogeny supports the monophyly of all tribes (except Diarrheneae) and all subtribes with at least two species, with strongly supported resolution of their relationships. Molecular dating suggests that Pooideae originated in the late Cretaceous, with subsequent divergences under cooling conditions first among many tribes from the early middle to late Eocene and again among genera in the middle Miocene and later periods. We identified a cluster of gene duplications (CGD5) shared by the core Pooideae (with 80% Pooideae species) near the Eocene-Oligocene transition, coinciding with the transition from closed to open habitat and an upshift of diversification rate. Molecular evolutionary analyses homologs of CBF for cold resistance uncovered tandem duplications during the core Pooideae history, dramatically increasing their copy number and possibly promoting adaptation to cold habitats. Moreover, duplication of AP1/FUL-like genes before the Pooideae origin might have facilitated the regulation of the vernalization pathway under cold environments. These and other results provide new insights into factors that likely have contributed to the successful adaptation of Pooideae members to temperate regions.
AB - Adaptation to cool climates has occurred several times in different angiosperm groups. Among them, Pooideae, the largest grass subfamily with ∼3,900 species including wheat and barley, have successfully occupied many temperate regions and play a prominent role in temperate ecosystems. To investigate possible factors contributing to Pooideae adaptive evolution to cooling climates, we performed phylogenetic reconstruction using five gene sets (with 1,234 nuclear genes and their subsets) from 157 transcriptomes/genomes representing all 15 tribes and 24 of 26 subtribes. Our phylogeny supports the monophyly of all tribes (except Diarrheneae) and all subtribes with at least two species, with strongly supported resolution of their relationships. Molecular dating suggests that Pooideae originated in the late Cretaceous, with subsequent divergences under cooling conditions first among many tribes from the early middle to late Eocene and again among genera in the middle Miocene and later periods. We identified a cluster of gene duplications (CGD5) shared by the core Pooideae (with 80% Pooideae species) near the Eocene-Oligocene transition, coinciding with the transition from closed to open habitat and an upshift of diversification rate. Molecular evolutionary analyses homologs of CBF for cold resistance uncovered tandem duplications during the core Pooideae history, dramatically increasing their copy number and possibly promoting adaptation to cold habitats. Moreover, duplication of AP1/FUL-like genes before the Pooideae origin might have facilitated the regulation of the vernalization pathway under cold environments. These and other results provide new insights into factors that likely have contributed to the successful adaptation of Pooideae members to temperate regions.
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U2 - 10.1093/molbev/msac026
DO - 10.1093/molbev/msac026
M3 - Article
C2 - 35134207
AN - SCOPUS:85124636303
SN - 0737-4038
VL - 39
JO - Molecular Biology and Evolution
JF - Molecular Biology and Evolution
IS - 2
M1 - msac026
ER -