Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome

PhD Two of the most rapid drivers of evolution are hybridisation and polyploidisation. Hybridisation allows the rapid introduction of novel genetic material, potentially much faster than mutations, but this process is impeded by reproductive barriers between species. Differencesinploidylevelcanforms...

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Main Author: Zohren, Jasmin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Queen Mary University of London 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/24564
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spelling ftqueenmaryuniv:oai:qmro.qmul.ac.uk:123456789/24564 2023-05-15T15:44:30+02:00 Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome Zohren, Jasmin 2017-06-23T14:00:31.368Z http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/24564 en eng Queen Mary University of London Zohren, J, 2017. Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome. Queen Mary University of London http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/24564 The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author School of Biological and Chemical Sciences hybridisation polyploidisation Thesis 2017 ftqueenmaryuniv 2022-09-25T20:16:21Z PhD Two of the most rapid drivers of evolution are hybridisation and polyploidisation. Hybridisation allows the rapid introduction of novel genetic material, potentially much faster than mutations, but this process is impeded by reproductive barriers between species. Differencesinploidylevelcanformsuchabarrier. Hybridisationaswellaspolyploidyareknown to occur frequently in the plant kingdom, including the genus Betula, which is investigated in this thesis. Three species of the Betula genus that exist in the United Kingdom are studied here: B. nana (dwarf birch), B. pendula (silver birch), and B. pubescens (downy birch). They differ in ploidy: B. nana and B. pendula are diploid and B. pubescens is a tetraploid. HybridisationandgeneflowbetweenthesethreespecieswasanalysedbyusingaRAD-seq dataset derived from 196 wild individuals. It was found that introgression acts unidirectionally from the diploid into the tetraploid species and that there is a cline of introgression between the north and south of the UK. This result suggests a range shift of the species from different distributions in the past. Gene flow from B. nana to B. pubescens could be a neutral or even maladaptive consequence of their past species distributions. Alternatively, it could be an adaptive process: alleles from B. nana could be helping B. pubescens to adapt to harsher, more northerly populations. To gain a preliminary understanding of the possible effects of introgression, the loci in close linkage to RAD tags introgressed from B. nana into B. pubescens were investigated and their putative function inferred by comparing their homologs in related species. To enhance the analyses, a draft whole genome sequence assembly of a B. nana individual was improved with long read data generated by PacBio sequencing, as well as the addition of RNA-seq data. This produced a more contiguous and complete reference sequence, enabling a closer look at more genes in linkage to the RAD tags. Marie-Curie FP7 framework INTERCROSSING funding Thesis Betula nana Dwarf birch Queen Mary University of London: Queen Mary Research Online (QMRO)
institution Open Polar
collection Queen Mary University of London: Queen Mary Research Online (QMRO)
op_collection_id ftqueenmaryuniv
language English
topic School of Biological and Chemical Sciences
hybridisation
polyploidisation
spellingShingle School of Biological and Chemical Sciences
hybridisation
polyploidisation
Zohren, Jasmin
Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
topic_facet School of Biological and Chemical Sciences
hybridisation
polyploidisation
description PhD Two of the most rapid drivers of evolution are hybridisation and polyploidisation. Hybridisation allows the rapid introduction of novel genetic material, potentially much faster than mutations, but this process is impeded by reproductive barriers between species. Differencesinploidylevelcanformsuchabarrier. Hybridisationaswellaspolyploidyareknown to occur frequently in the plant kingdom, including the genus Betula, which is investigated in this thesis. Three species of the Betula genus that exist in the United Kingdom are studied here: B. nana (dwarf birch), B. pendula (silver birch), and B. pubescens (downy birch). They differ in ploidy: B. nana and B. pendula are diploid and B. pubescens is a tetraploid. HybridisationandgeneflowbetweenthesethreespecieswasanalysedbyusingaRAD-seq dataset derived from 196 wild individuals. It was found that introgression acts unidirectionally from the diploid into the tetraploid species and that there is a cline of introgression between the north and south of the UK. This result suggests a range shift of the species from different distributions in the past. Gene flow from B. nana to B. pubescens could be a neutral or even maladaptive consequence of their past species distributions. Alternatively, it could be an adaptive process: alleles from B. nana could be helping B. pubescens to adapt to harsher, more northerly populations. To gain a preliminary understanding of the possible effects of introgression, the loci in close linkage to RAD tags introgressed from B. nana into B. pubescens were investigated and their putative function inferred by comparing their homologs in related species. To enhance the analyses, a draft whole genome sequence assembly of a B. nana individual was improved with long read data generated by PacBio sequencing, as well as the addition of RNA-seq data. This produced a more contiguous and complete reference sequence, enabling a closer look at more genes in linkage to the RAD tags. Marie-Curie FP7 framework INTERCROSSING funding
format Thesis
author Zohren, Jasmin
author_facet Zohren, Jasmin
author_sort Zohren, Jasmin
title Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
title_short Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
title_full Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
title_fullStr Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
title_full_unstemmed Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome
title_sort introgression in betula species of different ploidy levelsand the analysis of the betula nana genome
publisher Queen Mary University of London
publishDate 2017
url http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/24564
genre Betula nana
Dwarf birch
genre_facet Betula nana
Dwarf birch
op_relation Zohren, J, 2017. Introgression in Betula Species of Different Ploidy Levelsand the Analysis of the Betula nana Genome. Queen Mary University of London
http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/24564
op_rights The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author
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