The duplication of entire genomes has long been recognized as having great potential for evolutionary novelties, but the mechanisms underlying their resolution through gene loss are poorly understood. Here we show that in the unicellular eukaryote Paramecium tetraurelia, a ciliate, most of the nearly 40,000 genes arose through at least three successive whole-genome duplications. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that the most recent duplication coincides with an explosion of speciation events that gave rise to the P. aurelia complex of 15 sibling species. We observed that gene loss occurs over a long timescale, not as an initial massive event. Genes from the same metabolic pathway or protein complex have common patterns of gene loss, and highly expressed genes are over-retained after all duplications. The conclusion of this analysis is that many genes are maintained after whole-genome duplication not because of functional innovation but because of gene dosage constraints.Ciliates are unique among unicellular organisms in that they separate germline and somatic functions 1 . Each cell harbours two kinds of nucleus, namely silent diploid micronuclei and highly polyploid macronuclei. The latter are unusual in that they contain an extensively rearranged genome streamlined for expression and divide by a non-mitotic process. Only micronuclei undergo meiosis to perpetuate genetic information; the macronuclei are lost at each sexual generation and develop anew from the micronuclear lineage.In Paramecium the exact number of micronuclear chromosomes (more than 50) and the structures of their centromeres and telomeres remain unknown. During macronuclear development, these chromosomes are amplified to about 800 copies and undergo two types of DNA elimination event. Tens of thousand of short, unique copy elements (internal eliminated sequences) are removed by a precise mechanism that leads to the reconstitution of functional genes 2 .Transposable elements and other repeated sequences are removed by an imprecise mechanism leading either to chromosome fragmentation and de novo telomere addition or to variable internal deletions 3 . These rearrangements occur after a few rounds of endoreplication, leading to some heterogeneity in the sequences abutting the imprecisely eliminated regions 3 . The sizes of the resulting, acentric macronuclear chromosomes range from 50-1,000 kilobases (kb) as measured by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Because the sexual process of autogamy results in an entirely homozygous genotype 4 , the macronuclear DNA that was sequenced was genetically homogeneous.The Paramecium genome sequence The Paramecium macronuclear genome sequence was established with the use of a whole-genome shotgun and assembly strategy. Paired-end sequencing of plasmid and bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones provided a coverage of 13 genome equivalents (Supplementary Table S1). We assembled the sequence reads with Arachne 5 in 1,907 contigs connected in 697 scaffolds of size greater than 2 kb, giving a total coverage of 72...
Transcription and maintenance of genome integrity are fundamental cellular functions. Deregulation of transcription and defects in DNA repair lead to serious pathologies. The Mediator complex links RNA polymerase (Pol) II transcription and nucleotide excision repair via Rad2/XPG endonuclease. However, the functional interplay between Rad2/XPG, Mediator and Pol II remains to be determined. In this study, we investigated their functional dynamics using genomic and genetic approaches. In a mutant affected in Pol II phosphorylation leading to Mediator stabilization on core promoters, Rad2 genome-wide occupancy shifts towards core promoters following that of Mediator, but decreases on transcribed regions together with Pol II. Specific Mediator mutations increase UV sensitivity, reduce Rad2 recruitment to transcribed regions, lead to uncoupling of Rad2, Mediator and Pol II and to colethality with deletion of Rpb9 Pol II subunit involved in transcription-coupled repair. We provide new insights into the functional interplay between Rad2, Mediator and Pol II and propose that dynamic interactions with Mediator and Pol II are involved in Rad2 loading to the chromatin. Our work contributes to the understanding of the complex link between transcription and DNA repair machineries, dysfunction of which leads to severe diseases.
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