Evidence for degenerate tetraploidy in bdelloid rotifers

  1. David B. Mark Welch*,
  2. Jessica L. Mark Welch*, and
  3. Matthew Meselson*,,
  1. *Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543; and
  2. Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
  1. Contributed by Matthew Meselson, January 31, 2008 (received for review November 9, 2007)

Abstract

Rotifers of class Bdelloidea have evolved for millions of years apparently without sexual reproduction. We have sequenced 45- to 70-kb regions surrounding the four copies of the hsp82 gene of the bdelloid rotifer Philodina roseola, each of which is on a separate chromosome. The four regions comprise two colinear gene-rich pairs with gene content, order, and orientation conserved within each pair. Only a minority of genes are common to both pairs, also in the same orientation and order, but separated by gene-rich segments present in only one or the other pair. The pattern is consistent with degenerate tetraploidy with numerous segmental deletions, some in one pair of colinear chromosomes and some in the other. Divergence in 1,000-bp windows varies along an alignment of a colinear pair, from zero to as much as 20% in a pattern consistent with gene conversion associated with recombinational repair of DNA double-strand breaks. Although pairs of colinear chromosomes are a characteristic of sexually reproducing diploids and polyploids, a quite different explanation for their presence in bdelloids is suggested by the recent finding that bdelloid rotifers can recover and resume reproduction after suffering hundreds of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks per oocyte nucleus. Because bdelloid primary oocytes are in G1 and therefore lack sister chromatids, we propose that bdelloid colinear chromosome pairs are maintained as templates for the repair of DNA double-strand breaks caused by the frequent desiccation and rehydration characteristic of bdelloid habitats.

Footnotes

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: msm{at}wjh.harvard.edu
  • Author contributions: D.B.M.W. and J.L.M.W. designed research; D.B.M.W. and J.L.M.W. performed research; D.B.M.W. and M.M. analyzed data; and D.B.M.W. and M.M. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. EU432546EU432549).

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