Genetic diversity within a tree and alternative indexes for different evolutionary effects

Quant Plant Biol. 2024 Dec 6:5:e11. doi: 10.1017/qpb.2024.9. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Trees, living for centuries, accumulate somatic mutations in their growing trunks and branches, causing genetic divergence within a single tree. Stem cell lineages in a shoot apical meristem accumulate mutations independently and diverge from each other. In plants, somatic mutations can alter the genetic composition of reproductive organs and gametes, impacting future generations. To evaluate the genetic variation among a tree's reproductive organs, we consider three indexes: mean pairwise phylogenetic distance (), phylogenetic diversity (; sum of branch lengths in molecular phylogeny) and parent-offspring phylogenetic distance (). The tissue architecture of trees facilitated the accumulation of somatic mutations, which have various evolutionary effects, including enhancing fitness under strong sib competition and intense host-pathogen interactions, efficiently eliminating deleterious mutations through epistasis and increasing genetic variance in the population. Choosing appropriate indexes for the genetic diversity of somatic mutations depends on the specific aspect of evolutionary influence being assessed.

Keywords: modular organism; pairwise phylogenetic distance; parent-offspring distance; phylogenetic diversity; somatic mutations.