Legume genome evolution viewed through the <i>Medicago truncatula</i> and <i>Lotus japonicus</i> genomes

Steven B. Cannon(University of Minnesota), Lieven Sterck(Ghent University), Stéphane Rombauts(Ghent University), Shusei Sato(Kazusa DNA Research Institute), Foo Cheung, Jérôme Gouzy(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Xiaohong Wang(University of Minnesota), Joann Mudge(University of Minnesota), Jayprakash Vasdewani(University of Minnesota), Thomas Schiex, M. Spannagl(Institute of Bioinformatics and Systems Biology), Erin L. Monaghan, Christine Nicholson(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Sean Humphray(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Heiko Schoof(Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research), Klaus Mayer(Institute of Bioinformatics and Systems Biology), Jane Rogers(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Françis Quétier(Centre National de Recherche en Génomique Humaine), Giles Oldroyd(John Innes Centre), Frederic Debellé(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Douglas R. Cook(University of California, Davis), Ernest F. Retzel(Joint Center for Structural Genomics), Bruce A. Roe(University of Oklahoma), Christopher D. Town, Satoshi Tabata(Kazusa DNA Research Institute), Yves Van de Peer(Ghent University), Nevin D. Young(University of Minnesota)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
September 26, 2006
Cited by 315Open Access
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Abstract

Genome sequencing of the model legumes, Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus, provides an opportunity for large-scale sequence-based comparison of two genomes in the same plant family. Here we report synteny comparisons between these species, including details about chromosome relationships, large-scale synteny blocks, microsynteny within blocks, and genome regions lacking clear correspondence. The Lotus and Medicago genomes share a minimum of 10 large-scale synteny blocks, each with substantial collinearity and frequently extending the length of whole chromosome arms. The proportion of genes syntenic and collinear within each synteny block is relatively homogeneous. Medicago-Lotus comparisons also indicate similar and largely homogeneous gene densities, although gene-containing regions in Mt occupy 20-30% more space than Lj counterparts, primarily because of larger numbers of Mt retrotransposons. Because the interpretation of genome comparisons is complicated by large-scale genome duplications, we describe synteny, synonymous substitutions and phylogenetic analyses to identify and date a probable whole-genome duplication event. There is no direct evidence for any recent large-scale genome duplication in either Medicago or Lotus but instead a duplication predating speciation. Phylogenetic comparisons place this duplication within the Rosid I clade, clearly after the split between legumes and Salicaceae (poplar).


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