Přehled o publikaci
2024
Evolutionary new centromeres in Arabideae genomes
KOSTIUK, Stanislav; Petra HLOUŠKOVÁ; Milan POUCH; Terezie MALÍK MANDÁKOVÁ; Martin LYSÁK et al.Basic information
Original name
Evolutionary new centromeres in Arabideae genomes
Authors
KOSTIUK, Stanislav; Petra HLOUŠKOVÁ; Milan POUCH; Terezie MALÍK MANDÁKOVÁ and Martin LYSÁK
Edition
EMBO workshop: Plant genome stability and change, 2024 Olomouc, 2024
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Konferenční abstrakta
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
References:
Marked to be transferred to RIV
No
Organization
Středoevropský technologický institut – Repository – Repository
Keywords in English
Centromere repositioning; ENCs;
Links
EH22_008/0004581, research and development project. GA23-06840S, research and development project.
Changed: 20/3/2025 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Abstract
In the original language
Centromere repositioning is a well-documented phenomenon in mammals and plants. It involves the formation of a new centromere on the same chromosome without disrupting genome colinearity and contributes to genome evolution and reproductive isolation. However, the origin, structure and evolution of evolutionary new centromeres (ENCs) remain largely unexplored. To address this gap, we performed de-novo genome assemblies of six Arabideae species using PacBio HiFi and ONT nanopore reads. For four species (Draba nemorosa, D. podolica, Arabis auriculata, and the early diverging Pseudoturritis turrita) we achieved telomere-to-telomere chromosome-level assemblies, along with scaffold-level assemblies for A. cypria and Pachyneurum grandiflorum. Both Draba species share a common chromosome structure and relative centromere positions, Pa. grandiflorum is structurally similar to Arabis alpina and A. montbretiana, while the genome of A. Auriculate originated by descending dysploidy (from n = 8 to n = 7). In Ps. turrita paleocentromeres consist of four tandem repeats (monomer size 149, 176, 186 and 63 bp) and LTR retroelements (Ale, CRM, Retand). Compared to the paleocentromeres, the ENCs were repositioned by 4 Mb (median) in D. nemorosa, by 17 Mb in D. podolica, by 11 Mb in Pa. grandiflorum and by 6 Mb in A. auriculata. We provide a detailed sequence and epigenetic characterization of homeologous paleocentromeric sites and ENCs and infer the mechanism of centromere repositioning in the Arabideae.