DNA methylation reprogramming, TEs derepression and postzygotic isolation of nascent species

The genomic shock hypothesis stipulates that the stress associated with divergent genomes admixture can cause transposable elements (TEs) derepression which could act as a strong postzygotic isolation mechanism. TEs impact gene structure, expression patterns and chromosome organization, and may have deleterious consequences when released. For this reason, they are silenced by heterochromatin formation, which includes DNA methylation. Here we show that a significant proportion of TEs are differentially methylated between the ‘Dwarf’ (limnetic) and the ‘Normal’ (benthic) whitefish, two nascent species that diverged some 15,000 generations ago within the Coregonus clupeaformis (complex). Moreover, TEs are overrepresented among sites that were demethylated in F1 hybrids, indicative of their derepression, consistent with earlier studies that revealed TE transcriptional derepression causing abnormal embryonic development and death of hybrids. Our results support the hypothesis of a genomic shock in dwarf-normal whitefish hybrids causing methylation reprogramming and TE derepression which act as a mechanism off postzygotic isolation.

Identifier
Source https://data.blue-cloud.org/search-details?step=~012DFC0C05D10DDC140731F788E23B872BC866D4C01
Metadata Access https://data.blue-cloud.org/api/collections/DFC0C05D10DDC140731F788E23B872BC866D4C01
Provenance
Instrument Illumina HiSeq 2000; ILLUMINA
Publisher Blue-Cloud Data Discovery & Access service; ELIXIR-ENA
Publication Year 2024
OpenAccess true
Contact blue-cloud-support(at)maris.nl
Representation
Discipline Marine Science
Temporal Point 2019-11-01T00:00:00Z