| Literature DB >> 25295046 |
Maik Klie1, Stephan Schie2, Marcus Linde3, Thomas Debener3.
Abstract
Polyploidy is a widespread phenomenon among higher plants and a major factor shaping the structure and evolution of plant genomes. The important ornamental chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum indicum hybrid) possesses a hexaploid genome with 54 chromosomes and was classified based on its evolutionary origin and cytological methods as an allopolyploid. However, it is questionable whether cytological methods are sufficient to determine the type of ploidy, and there are more informative methods available based on molecular marker analyses. Therefore, we collected segregation data for 406 dominant molecular marker alleles [327 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLPs), 65 single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCPs) and 14 microsatellites (EST-SSRs)] in a biparental F1 population of 160 individuals. We analyzed these data for the characteristics that differ between allopolyploids and autopolyploids, including the segregation ratio of each marker, the ratio of single-dose (SD) to multi-dose (MD) markers, the ratio of SD markers in coupling to those in repulsion and the banding patterns of the SSRs. Whereas the analysis of the segregation ratio of each polymorphic marker indicated disomic (13 markers) as well as hexasomic (eight markers) inheritance, the ratio of SD markers in coupling to those in repulsion was 1:0, which is characteristic of autopolyploids. The observed ratio of SD to MD markers was 0.67:0.33 which is significantly different to the expected segregation for auto- and allohexaploids. Furthermore, the three EST-SSR alleles were inherited in all possible combinations and were not independent of each other, as expected for fixed heterozygosity in allopolyploids. Combining our results with published cytological data indicates that cultivated chrysanthemums should be classified as segmental allohexaploids.Entities:
Keywords: allopolyploidy; autopolyploidy; linkage in repulsion; molecular marker; polysomic inheritance; single dose markers
Year: 2014 PMID: 25295046 PMCID: PMC4172100 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
The primer combinations used for the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis.
| AGC | AGT | ACCG |
| AAT | AGT | ACAG |
| AAT | ACG | ATGG |
| AGC | ACA | ACAT |
| AAT | – | ACGA |
| AGA | – | ACGG |
| AGT | – | ATAG |
| AAC | – | ACCT |
| AAT | – | ATGA |
| – | ACA | AAGC |
| – | ACG | AGCA |
| – | ACG | AAGC |
| – | ACG | ACGA |
| – | ACG | ACAC |
| – | ACG | ATCA |
| – | ACA | ACCA |
| – | ACA | ACAG |
A list of the primer pairs for the candidate genes CCD7, CCD8, MAX2, and BRC1 used in the single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis.
| Gene | Accession | Primer pairs | Product size | Detection method | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CCD7 | unpublished | F | CCCTCTAGATGGTCATGG | 550 bp | Silver staining |
| R | AGCAAGATCTAACAAGTCCACACCAC | ||||
| F* | TGTCATGCAACGCAGAGGAT | 1750 bp | M13-IRD700 | ||
| R | CCCACATTTGAGAAGGAGCTT | ||||
| F | GGTGGGGCCCCTTACGAGAT | 600 bp | Silver staining | ||
| R | GCATTGCATGACATCATAAG | ||||
| F* | TCCATGACTGGGCTTTCACA | 380 bp | M13-IRD700 | ||
| R | CCCACATTTGAGAAGGAGCTT | ||||
| CCD8 | F* | ATGGCATCCTGAGTCGAAAG | 550 bp | M13-IRD700 | |
| R | GCGTCTACTAGTTCTCCCTTTGG | ||||
| F* | ACAAGCTGCGGCTTCAAA | 260 bp | M13-IRD700 | ||
| R | GCGTCTACTAGTTCTCCCTTTGG | ||||
| F* | GGTGCGTCCCTAACTGACAA | 480 bp | M13-IRD700 | ||
| R | GACTCAGGATGCCATTCAAAC | ||||
| MAX2 | JX556222 | F* | GCCAATCCAGGGTCGGATAC | 550 bp | M13-IRD700 |
| R | GTAACGACAAACTCCTCTGG | ||||
| F* | ATGTCTTTCTCCACCACAACAAT | 1400 bp | M13-IRD700 | ||
| R | AAGCCTACTCGCACTCAACG | ||||
| BRC1 | JX870411 | F | TGCAGCATCAGTTCAGTGACT | 380 | M13-IRD700 |
| R* | AGCAGTAGCATACAATTGACATAGT |
List of the three polymorphic EST-SSR markers used on the chrysanthemum MK11/3 population.
| Accession | Forward primer | Reverse primer | Product size | Motif | Copy number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 69838459 | CCTCTCCTCCCAACAAACAA | CCGTAAGTGCCTTCACCAAT | 209 bp | AAG | 8 |
| 69834897 | CCGCTACAATTCAAACAAACAA | GTGGTGGTGGTTGAGAACCT | 207 bp | AATCCA | 5 |
| 69837400 | CCAATTGAGGCGTTTTGTTT | CATTTTCCACGTAAGCACCA | 239 bp | GGT | 10 |
The marker segregation types for the MK11/3 population.
| Parental composition | Segregation ratio | Number of markers | Type of segregation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal | 1:1 | 63 | Non-informative |
| Paternal | 1:1 | 85 | Non-informative |
| Maternal | 1:2 | 17 | Skewed |
| Paternal | 1:2 | 18 | Skewed |
| Maternal | 3:1 | 7 | Disomic, |
| Paternal | 3:1 | 5 | Disomic, |
| Maternal | 4:1 | 3 | Hexasomic, |
| Paternal | 4:1 | 5 | Hexasomic, |
| Biparental | 7:1 | 1 | Disomic, |
The ratios of single-dose (SD) to multi-dose (MD) markers in the MK11/3 population.
| Observed | Expected | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Allopolyploid | Autopolyploid | ||
| 273 | 253.75 | 304.5 | |
| 133 | 152.25 | 101.5 | |
| 406 | 406 | 406 | |
| 0.67:0.33 | 0.625:0.375 | 0.75:0.25 | |
| 3.894* | 13.034* | ||
| 0.048* | 0.0003* | ||
The ratios of the uniparental SD markers linked in coupling to those in repulsion for the MK11/3 population.
| Allopolyploid | Autopolyploid | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coupling | Repulsion | Coupling | Repulsion | |
| 71 | 0 | 71 | 0 | |
| 35.5 | 35.5 | 71 | 0 | |
| 43.6708* | 0 | |||
| 3.89e-11* | 1 | |||