| Literature DB >> 33815455 |
Laibin Zhao1,2,3, Die Xie1, Chaolan Fan1, Shujie Zhang1, Lei Huang1, Shunzong Ning1, Bo Jiang1, Lianquan Zhang1, Zhongwei Yuan1, Dengcai Liu1, Ming Hao2.
Abstract
Primary allopolyploids are not only ideal materials to study species evolution, but also important bridges in incorporating genetic diversity of wild species into crops. Primary allopolyploids typically exhibit chromosome instability that a disadvantage trait in crop breeding. Newly synthesized hexaploid wheat has been widely used in wheat genetics and breeding studies. To better understand the cytological and genetic basis of chromosome instability, this study investigated the chromosomes of a large number of seeds derived from the synthetic wheat SHW-L1 and its hybrids with natural wheat. SHW-L1 exhibited persistent chromosome instability since we observed a high frequent chromosome variation de novo generated from euploid SHW-L1 plants at the 14th generation of selfing (F14). High frequent chromosome variations were also observed in the F2 hybrids and most of the analyzed recombinant inbred lines (RILs) at F14, derived from the cross of SHW-L1 with common wheat variety Chuanmai 32. Chromosome instability was associated with frequent univalency during meiotic metaphase I. The experiment on reciprocal crosses between SHW-L1 and Chuanmai 32 indicated that cytoplasm has not obvious effects on chromosome instability. An analysis on 48 F14 RILs revealed chromosome variation frequency was not associated with the Ph1 alleles from either SHW-L1 or Chuanmai 32, rejecting the hypothesis that chromosome instability was due to the Ph1 role of synthetic wheat. In the analyzed RILs, chromosome instability influences the phenotype uniformity, showing as obvious trait differences among plants within a RIL. However, the analyzed commercial varieties only containing ∼12.5% genomic components of synthetic wheat were chromosomally stable, indicating that chromosome instability caused by synthetic wheat can be effectively overcome by increasing the genetic background of common wheat.Entities:
Keywords: aneuploidy; chromosome instability; meiosis; polyploidization; synthetic hexaploid wheat
Year: 2021 PMID: 33815455 PMCID: PMC8010257 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.654382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Chromosome variations in synthetic wheat SHW-L1 and its derivatives.
| Plant material | Number Of plants or lines | Number Of observed seeds | % for 2 | Number distribution* | Structural variation %** |
| SHW-L1 | 13 | 181 | 48.6 (51.9, 16.7–83.3) | 39–45 | 20.4 |
| SHW-L1/CM 32 F1 | 3 | 95 | 68.4 (68.0, 66.7–69.4) | 38.5–46 | 35.5 |
| CM 32/SHW-L1 F1 | 3 | 85 | 64.7 (64.3, 60.0–68.4) | 39.5–44 | 39.0 |
| RILs F14 | 48 | 1437 | 24.6 (22.8, 0.0–92.5) | 38–49 | NA |
| Chuanmai 32 | 5 | 78 | 1.3 | 41–42 | NA |
| Shumai 969 | Bulked | 74 | 1.3 | 42–42.5 | NA |
| Shumai 830 | Bulked | 100 | 3.0 | 41–42 | NA |
FIGURE 1FISH karyotypes. (A) FISH karyotypes of SHW-L1 with its parents and Chuanmai 32. 1, tetraploid wheat AS2255; 2, SHW-L1; 3, Chuanmai 32. (B) Chromosomal structural variations detected in SHW-L1 and F2 hybrids derived from reciprocal crosses between SHW-L1 and Chuanmai 32. Green FISH signals are from probe oligo-pTa-535; red signals are from probe oligo-pSc119.2.
FIGURE 2Meiotic observations: (A–C) Chuanmai 32; (D–F) SHW-L1; (G–I) SHW-L1/Chuanmai 32 F1; (J–L) Chuanmai 32/SHW-L1 F1. (A,D,G,J) are metaphase I. (B); (E,H,K) are at ana-/telophase I; (C,F,I,L) are tetrads. White arrows indicate univalents (D,G,J), separation of chromatids in first division (E,H,K), and micronuclei (F,I,L).
Meiotic features in euploid plants of synthetic SHW-L1 and its hybrids.
| Plant materials | Univalents | Laggards | Micronuclei | ||||
| Number of cells | Number of cells with univalent (%) | Number of univalents per cell | Number of cells | Number of cells with laggards (%) | Number of cells | Number of cells having micronuclei (%) | |
| Chuanmai 32 (2 | 39 | 2 (5.1) | 0.10 | 16 | 0 | 43 | 0 |
| SHW-L1 (2 | 65 | 58 (89.2) | 5.23 | 50 | 44 (88.0) | 104 | 79 (76.0) |
| SHW-L1/Chuanmai 32 F1 (2 | 58 | 58 (100.0) | 8.21 | 79 | 73 (92.4) | 40 | 30 (75.0) |
| Chuanmai 32/SHW-L1 F1 (2 | 73 | 72 (98.6) | 7.12 | 57 | 52 (91.2) | 42 | 39 (92.9) |
FIGURE 3Meiosis in a SHW-L1 monosomic 6B plant. (A,B) Metaphase I; (C) Anaphase I; (D,E) Ana-/telophase I; (F) Dyads, signals showing secondary constrictions of chromosome 1B, 6B, and 5D; (G,H); Anaphase II to telophase II; (I) Tetrads. White arrows indicate chromosome 6B or fragments thereof.
Correlations between aneuploid frequency and standard deviations in RILs.
| Environment | Trait | Correlation coefficient | p-Value |
| Wenjiang 2016 | Spike length | 0.36* | 0.01 |
| Spikelet number | 0.18 | 0.20 | |
| Wenjiang 2017 | Spike length | 0.07 | 0.61 |
| Spikelet number | 0.43** | 0.002 | |
| Beijing 2017 | Spike length | 0.39** | 0.006 |
| Spikelet number | 0.22 | 0.13 | |
| Plant height | 0.54** | 0.00 | |
| Rate of seed-setting | 0.35* | 0.01 | |
| Uppermost internode length | 0.17 | 0.24 |