Supplementary material from "A phylogenomic approach reveals a low somatic mutation rate in a long-lived plant"

  • Adam J. Orr (Creator)
  • Amanda Padovan (Creator)
  • David Kainer (Creator)
  • Carsten Külheim (Creator)
  • Lindell Bromham (Creator)
  • Carlos Bustos-Segura (Creator)
  • William Foley (Creator)
  • Tonya Haff (Creator)
  • Ji Fan Hsieh (Contributor)
  • Alejandro Morales-Suarez (Creator)
  • Reed Cartwright (Creator)
  • Robert Lanfear (Creator)
  • William Foley (Creator)
  • Robert Lanfear (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Somatic mutations can have important effects on the life history, ecology and evolution of plants, but the rate at which they accumulate is poorly understood and difficult to measure directly. Here, we demonstrate a novel method to measure somatic mutations in individual plants and use this approach to estimate the somatic mutation rate in a large, long-lived, phenotypically mosaic Eucalyptus melliodora tree. Despite being 100 times larger than Arabidopsis, this tree has a per-generation mutation rate only ten times greater, which suggests that this species may have evolved mechanisms to reduce the mutation rate per unit of growth. This adds to a growing body of evidence that illuminates the correlated evolutionary shifts in mutation rate and life history in plants.
Date made available2020
Publisherfigshare Academic Research System

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