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de Portugal da Silveira Teixeira de Sousa, Filipe
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- Increased evolutionary rates and conserved transcriptional response following allopolyploidization in brown algaePublication . Sousa, Filipe; Neiva, J.; Martins, Neusa; Jacinto, Rita; Anderson, Laura; Raimondi, Peter T.; Serrao, Ester; Pearson, GarethGenome mergers between independently evolving lineages, via allopolyploidy, can potentially lead to instantaneous sympatric speciation. However, little is known about the consequences of allopolyploidy and the resultant "genome shock" on genome evolution and expression beyond the plant and fungal branches of the Tree of Life. The aim of this study was to compare substitution rates and gene expression patterns in two allopolyploid brown algae (Phaeophyceae and Heterokonta) and their progenitors in the genus Pelvetiopsis N. L. Gardner in the north-east Pacific, and to date their relationships. We used RNA-seq data, all potential orthologues, and putative single-copy loci for phylogenomic, divergence, and gene expression analyses. The multispecies coalescent placed the origin of allopolyploids in the late Pleistocene (0.35-0.05 Ma). Homoeologues displayed increased nonsynonymous divergence compared with parental orthologues, consistent with relaxed selective constraint following allopolyploidization, including for genes with no evidence of pseudogenization or neofunctionalization. Patterns of homoeologue-orthologue expression conservation and expression level dominance were largely shared with both natural plant and fungal allopolyploids. Our results provide further support for common cross-Kingdom patterns of allopolyploid genome evolution and transcriptional responses, here in the evolutionarily distinct marine heterokont brown algae.
- A low‐latitude species pump: Peripheral isolation, parapatric speciation and mating‐system evolution converge in a marine radiationPublication . Almeida, Susana C.; Neiva, João; Sousa, Filipe; Martins, Neusa; Cox, Cymon; Melo‐Ferreira, José; Guiry, Michael D.; Serrao, Ester; Pearson, GarethGeologically recent radiations can shed light on speciation processes, but incomplete lineage sorting and introgressive gene flow render accurate evolutionary reconstruction and interpretation challenging. Independently evolving metapopulations of low dispersal taxa may provide an additional level of phylogeographic information, given sufficiently broad sampling and genome-wide sequencing. Evolution in the marine brown algal genus Fucus in the south-eastern North Atlantic was shaped by Quaternary climate-driven range shifts. Over this timescale, divergence and speciation occurred against a background of expansion-contraction cycles from multiple refugia, together with mating-system shifts from outcrossing (dioecy) to selfing hermaphroditism. We tested the hypothesis that peripheral isolation of range edge (dioecious) F. vesiculosus led to parapatric speciation and radiation of hermaphrodite lineages. Species tree methods using 876 single-copy nuclear genes and extensive geographic coverage produced conflicting topologies with respect to geographic clades of F. vesiculosus. All methods, however, revealed a new and early diverging hermaphrodite species, Fucus macroguiryi sp. nov. Both the multispecies coalescent and polymorphism-aware models (in contrast to concatenation) support sequential paraphyly in F. vesiculosus resulting from distinct evolutionary processes. Our results support (1) peripheral isolation of the southern F. vesiculosus clade prior to parapatric speciation and radiation of hermaphrodite lineages-a "low-latitude species pump". (2) Directional introgressive gene flow into F. vesiculosus around the present-day secondary contact zone (sympatric-allopatric boundary) between dioecious/hermaphrodite lineages as hermaphrodites expanded northwards, supported by concordance analysis and statistical tests of introgression. (3) Species boundaries in the extensive sympatric range are probably maintained by reproductive system (selfing in hermaphrodites) and reinforcement.