TY - JOUR T1 - Mutation rates in seeds and seed-banking influence substitution rates across the angiosperm phylogeny JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/156398 SP - 156398 AU - Marcel Dann AU - Sidonie Bellot AU - Sylwia Schepella AU - Hanno Schaefer AU - Aurélien Tellier Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/06/27/156398.abstract N2 - Background Seed-banking (the ability to persist in the soil over many generations) is usually considered as a dormant stage where genotypes are “stored” as a bet-hedging strategy in response to unpredictable environments. However, seed dormancy may instead have consequences for the integrity of the DNA and generate novel mutations.Methods We address this paradox by building phylogenies based on the plastomes and nuclear ITS of species belonging to ten angiosperm clades. In each clade, the substitution rate (branch-length) of a seed-banking species is compared with that of a closely-related non-seed-banking species.Results Seed-banking species show as high or higher substitution rates than non-seedbanking species, and therefore mutations occur in dormant seeds at a rate at least as high as in above-ground plants. Moreover, seed born mutations have the same probability to reach fixation as those from above ground. Our results are robust to differences in selection, generation time, and polymorphism.Conclusions Mutations occurring in seeds, and thus seed-banking, affect the population diversity of plant species, and are observable at the macro-evolutionary scale. Our study has consequences for seed storage projects, since the stored seeds are likely to accumulate mutations at a higher rate than previously thought. ER -