Evaluating the adaptive evolutionary convergence of carnivorous plant taxa through functional genomics

PeerJ. 2018 Jan 31:6:e4322. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4322. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Carnivorous plants are striking examples of evolutionary convergence, displaying complex and often highly similar adaptations despite lack of shared ancestry. Using available carnivorous plant genomes along with non-carnivorous reference taxa, this study examines the convergence of functional overrepresentation of genes previously implicated in plant carnivory. Gene Ontology (GO) coding was used to quantitatively score functional representation in these taxa, in terms of proportion of carnivory-associated functions relative to all functional sequence. Statistical analysis revealed that, in carnivorous plants as a group, only two of the 24 functions tested showed a signal of substantial overrepresentation. However, when the four carnivorous taxa were analyzed individually, 11 functions were found to be significant in at least one taxon. Though carnivorous plants collectively may show overrepresentation in functions from the predicted set, the specific functions that are overrepresented vary substantially from taxon to taxon. While it is possible that some functions serve a similar practical purpose such that one taxon does not need to utilize both to achieve the same result, it appears that there are multiple approaches for the evolution of carnivorous function in plant genomes. Our approach could be applied to tests of functional convergence in other systems provided on the availability of genomes and annotation data for a group.

Keywords: Carnivorous plants; Convergent evolution; Functional genomics; Gene Ontology.

Grants and funding

Gregory L. Wheeler’s doctoral studies are supported by a Distinguished University Fellowship, awarded by The Ohio State University Graduate School. Computational resources were provided by the Ohio Supercomputer Center (project PAS1172). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.