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Title

Genomic analyses reveal natural selection on reproduction related genes between two closely related Populus (Salicaceae) species.

Authors

Tian, Yang; Liu, Shu‐Yu; Ingvarsson, Pär K.; Zhao, Dan‐Dan; Wang, Li; Abuduhamiti, Baoerjiang; Cai, Jin‐Feng; Wu, Zhi‐Qiang; Zhang, Jian‐Guo; Wang, Zhao‐Shan

Abstract

Identifying the factors that cause reproductive isolation and their relative importance in species divergence is crucial to our understanding of speciation processes. In most species, natural selection is commonly considered to play a large role in driving speciation. Based on whole genome re‐sequencing data from 27 Populus alba and 28 Populus adenopoda individuals, we explored the factors related to reproductive isolation of these two closely related species. The results showed that the two species diverged ~5–10 million years ago (Ma), when the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau reached a certain height and the inland climate of the Asian continent became arid. In highly differentiated genomic regions, the relative divergence (FST) and absolute divergence (dxy) were significantly higher than the genomic background, θπ and shared polymorphisms decreased whereas fixed differences increased, which indicated that natural selection played a key role in the reproductive isolation of the two species. In addition, we found several genes that were related to reproduction that may be involved in explaining the reproductive isolation. Using phylogenetic trees resolved from haplotype data of Populus tomentosa and P. adenopoda, the maternal origin of P. tomentosa from P. adenopoda was likely to be located in Hubei and Chongqing Provinces.

Subjects

HUBEI Sheng (China); NATURAL selection; GENOMICS; REPRODUCTIVE isolation; POPLARS; SPECIES; SALICACEAE

Publication

Journal of Systematics & Evolution, 2023, Vol 61, Issue 5, p852

ISSN

1674-4918

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/jse.12911

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