Abstract
Ancient whole genome duplications (WGDs) are important in eukaryotic genome evolution, and are especially prominent in plants. Recent genomic studies from large vascular plant clades, including ferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms suggest that WGDs may represent a crucial mode of speciation. Moreover, numerous WGDs have been dated to events coinciding with major episodes of global and climatic upheaval, including the mass extinction at the KT boundary (~65 Ma) and during more recent intervals of global aridification in the Miocene (~10-5 Ma). These findings have led to the hypothesis that polyploidization may buffer lineages against the negative consequences of such disruptions. Here, we explore WGDs in the large, and diverse flowering plant clade Malpighiales using a combination of transcriptomes and complete genomes from 42 species. We conservatively identify 22 ancient WGDs, widely distributed across Malpighiales subclades. Our results provide strong support for the hypothesis that WGD is an important mode of speciation in plants. Importantly, we also identify that these events are clustered around the Eocene-Paleocene Transition (~54 Ma), during which time the planet was warmer and wetter than any period in the Cenozoic. These results establish that the Eocene Climate Optimum represents another, previously unrecognized, period of prolific WGDs in plants, and lends support to the hypothesis that polyploidization promotes adaptation and enhances plant survival during major episodes of global change. Malpighiales, in particular, may have been particularly influenced by these events given their predominance in the tropics where Eocene warming likely had profound impacts owing to the relatively tight thermal tolerances of tropical organisms.
Significance Statement Whole genome duplications (WGDs) are hypothesized to generate adaptive variations during episodes of climate change and global upheaval. Using large-scale phylogenomic assessments, we identify an impressive 22 ancient WGDs in the large, tropical flowering plant clade Malpighiales. This supports growing evidence that ancient WGDs are far more common than has been thought. Additionally, we identify that WGDs are clustered during a narrow window of time, ~54 Ma, when the climate was warmer and more humid than during any period in the last ~65 Ma. This lends support to the hypothesis that WGDs are associated with surviving climatic upheavals, especially for tropical organisms like Malpighiales, which have tight thermal tolerances.