Publication details

Reticulate allopolyploidy and subsequent dysploidy drive evolution and diversification in the cotton family

Authors

ZHANG Ren-Gang ZHAO Hang CONOVER Justin L SHANG Hong-Yun LIU De-Tuan ZHOU Min-Jie LIU Xiong-Fang JIA Kai-Hua SHAO Shi-Cheng LI Meng-Meng JIN Chong-Yang LIU Yi-Hui SHEN Xiao-Yi LI Da-Wei LYSÁK Martin WENDEL Jonathan F GE Xiao-Yang MA Yong-Peng

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Nature communications
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
web https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-62644-7
Doi https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62644-7
Keywords WHOLE-GENOME DUPLICATIONS; PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS; MALVACEAE; PLANTS; GENES; ANNOTATION; DIPLOIDIZATION; BOMBACOIDEAE; RADIATION; STRINGTIE
Attached files
Description Polyploidy and subsequent post-polyploid diploidization (PPD) are key drivers of plant genome evolution, yet their contributions to evolutionary success remain debated. Here, we analyze the Malvaceae family as an exemplary system for elucidating the evolutionary role of polyploidy and PPD in angiosperms, leveraging 11 high-quality chromosome-scale genomes from all nine subfamilies, including newly sequenced, near telomere-to-telomere assemblies from four of these subfamilies. Our findings reveal a complex reticulate paleoallopolyploidy history early in the diversification of the Malvadendrina clade, characterized by multiple rounds of species radiation punctuated by ancient allotetraploidization (Mal-beta) and allodecaploidization (Mal-alpha) events around the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary. We further reconstruct the evolutionary dynamics of PPD and find a strong correlation between dysploidy rate and taxonomic richness of the paleopolyploid subfamilies (R-2 >= 0.90, P < 1e-4), supporting the "polyploidy for survival and PPD for success" hypothesis. Overall, our study provides a comprehensive reconstruction of the evolutionary history of the Malvaceae and underscores the crucial role of polyploidy-dysploidy waves in shaping plant biodiversity.

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