The architecture of intra-organism mutation rate variation in plants

Wang, Long and Ji, Yilun and Hu, Yingwen and Hu, Huaying and Jia, Xianqin and Jiang, Mengmeng and Zhang, Xiaohui and Zhao, Lina and Zhang, Yanchun and Jia, Yanxiao and Qin, Chao and Yu, Luyao and Huang, Ju and Yang, Sihai and Hurst, Laurence D. and Tian, Dacheng and Barton, Nick H. (2019) The architecture of intra-organism mutation rate variation in plants. PLOS Biology, 17 (4). e3000191. ISSN 1545-7885

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Abstract

Given the disposability of somatic tissue, selection can favor a higher mutation rate in the early segregating soma than in germline, as seen in some animals. Although in plants intra-organismic mutation rate heterogeneity is poorly resolved, the same selectionist logic can predict a lower rate in shoot than in root and in longer-lived terminal tissues (e.g., leaves) than in ontogenetically similar short-lived ones (e.g., petals), and that mutation rate heterogeneity should be deterministic with no significant differences between biological replicates. To address these expectations, we sequenced 754 genomes from various tissues of eight plant species. Consistent with a selectionist model, the rate of mutation accumulation per unit time in shoot apical meristem is lower than that in root apical tissues in perennials, in which a high proportion of mutations in shoots are themselves transmissible, but not in annuals, in which somatic mutations tend not to be transmissible. Similarly, the number of mutations accumulated in leaves is commonly lower than that within a petal of the same plant, and there is no more heterogeneity in accumulation rates between replicate branches than expected by chance. High mutation accumulation in runners of strawberry is, we argue, the exception that proves the rule, as mutation transmission patterns indicate that runner has a restricted germline. However, we also find that in vitro callus tissue has a higher mutation rate (per unit time) than the wild-grown comparator, suggesting nonadaptive mutational “fragility”. As mutational fragility does not obviously explain why the shoot—root difference varies with plant longevity, we conclude that some mutation rate variation between tissues is consistent with selectionist theory but that a mechanistic null of mutational fragility should be considered.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Apsci Archives > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@apsciarchives.com
Date Deposited: 14 Feb 2023 08:12
Last Modified: 27 Sep 2023 06:48
URI: http://eprints.go2submission.com/id/eprint/121

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