High-quality genome and methylomes illustrate features underlying evolutionary success of oaks

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Abstract

The genus Quercus, which emerged ∼55 million years ago during globally warm temperatures, diversified into ∼450 extant species. We present a high-quality de novo genome assembly of a California endemic oak, Quercus lobata, revealing features consistent with oak evolutionary success. Effective population size remained large throughout history despite declining since early Miocene. Analysis of 39,373 mapped protein-coding genes outlined copious duplications consistent with genetic and phenotypic diversity, both by retention of genes created during the ancient γ whole genome hexaploid duplication event and by tandem duplication within families, including numerous resistance genes and a very large block of duplicated DUF247 genes, which have been found to be associated with self-incompatibility in grasses. An additional surprising finding is that subcontext-specific patterns of DNA methylation associated with transposable elements reveal broadly-distributed heterochromatin in intergenic regions, similar to grasses. Collectively, these features promote genetic and phenotypic variation that would facilitate adaptability to changing environments.

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Sork, V. L., Cokus, S. J., Fitz-Gibbon, S. T., Zimin, A. V., Puiu, D., Garcia, J. A., … Salzberg, S. L. (2022). High-quality genome and methylomes illustrate features underlying evolutionary success of oaks. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29584-y

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