6533b821fe1ef96bd127b918

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Mitochondrial introgression suggests extensive ancestral hybridization events among Saccharomyces species.

Carmela BellochSandi OrlićAmparo QuerolDavid PerisEladio BarrioEladio BarrioLaura Pérez-travésArmando Arias

subject

0301 basic medicineMitochondrial DNAParadoxusGenomeSaccharomycesHoming endonucleaseElectron Transport Complex IV03 medical and health sciencesOpen Reading FramesSaccharomycesSpecies SpecificityGeneticsMolecular BiologyGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenybiologyBase SequenceGeographybiology.organism_classificationReticulate evolutionMitochondria030104 developmental biologyHaplotypesEvolutionary biologyHorizontal gene transferGenome Mitochondrialbiology.proteinHybridization GeneticSaccharomyces reticulate evolution mitochondrial introgression selfish elements recombination interspecies hybridizationSequence Alignment

description

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in eukaryotic plastids and mitochondrial genomes is common, and plays an important role in organism evolution. In yeasts, recent mitochondrial HGT has been suggested between S. cerevisiae and S. paradoxus. However, few strains have been explored given the lack of accurate mitochondrial genome annotations. Mitochondrial genome sequences are important to understand how frequent these introgressions occur, and their role in cytonuclear incompatibilities and fitness. Indeed, most of the Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller genetic incompatibilities described in yeasts are driven by cytonuclear incompatibilities. We herein explored the mitochondrial inheritance of several worldwide distributed wild Saccharomyces species and their hybrids isolated from different sources and geographic origins. We demonstrated the existence of several recombination points in mitochondrial region COX2-ORF1, likely mediated by either the activity of the protein encoded by the ORF1 (F-SceIII) gene, a free-standing homing endonuclease, or mostly facilitated by A+T tandem repeats and regions of integration of GC clusters. These introgressions were shown to occur among strains of the same species and among strains of different species, which suggests a complex model of Saccharomyces evolution that involves several ancestral hybridization events in wild environments.

10.1016/j.ympev.2017.02.008https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28189617