Litcius/Paper detail

Population Genomics of the Facultatively Sexual Liverwort <i>Marchantia polymorpha</i>

George Sandler, Aneil F. Agrawal, Stephen Wright

2023Genome Biology and Evolution11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The population genomics of facultatively sexual organisms are understudied compared with their abundance across the tree of life. We explore patterns of genetic diversity in two subspecies of the facultatively sexual liverwort Marchantia polymorpha using samples from across Southern Ontario, Canada. Despite the ease with which M. polymorpha should be able to propagate asexually, we find no evidence of strictly clonal descent among our samples and little to no signal of isolation by distance. Patterns of identity-by-descent tract sharing further showed evidence of recent recombination and close relatedness between geographically distant isolates, suggesting long distance gene flow and at least a modest frequency of sexual reproduction. However, the M. polymorpha genome contains overall very low levels of nucleotide diversity and signs of inefficient selection evidenced by a relatively high fraction of segregating deleterious variants. We interpret these patterns as possible evidence of the action of linked selection and a small effective population size due to past generations of asexual propagation. Overall, the M. polymorpha genome harbors signals of a complex history of both sexual and asexual reproduction.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAsexual reproductionMarchantia polymorphaSexual reproductionEvolutionary biologyPopulationGenetic diversityGenomicsGeneticsGene flowGenomeSubspeciesNucleotide diversityGenetic variationGeneEcologyHaplotypeGenotypeDemographySociologyBryophyte Studies and RecordsPeatlands and Wetlands EcologyBotany and Plant Ecology Studies