Journalartikel

Inherited allelic variants and novel karyotype changes influence fertility and genome stability in Brassica allohexaploids


AutorenlisteGaebelein, Roman; Schiessl, Sarah, V; Samans, Birgit; Batley, Jacqueline; Mason, Annaliese S.

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2019

Seiten965-978

ZeitschriftNew Phytologist

Bandnummer223

Heftnummer2

ISSN0028-646X

eISSN1469-8137

Open Access StatusBronze

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/nph.15804

VerlagWiley


Abstract
Synthetic allohexaploid Brassica hybrids (2n = AABBCC) do not exist naturally, but can be synthesized by crosses between diploid and/or allotetraploid Brassica species. Using these hybrids, we aimed to identify how novel allohexaploids restore fertility and normal meiosis after formation. Chromosome inheritance, genome structure, fertility and meiotic behaviour were assessed in three segregating allohexaploid populations derived from the cross (B. napus x B. carinata) x B. juncea using a combination of molecular marker genotyping, phenotyping and cytogenetics. Plants with unbalanced A-C translocations in one direction (where a C-genome chromosome fragment replaces an A-genome fragment) but not the other (where an A-genome fragment replaces a C-genome fragment) showed significantly reduced fertility across all populations. Genomic regions associated with fertility contained several meiosis genes with putatively causal mutations inherited from the parents (copies of SCC2 in the A genome, PAIR1/PRD3, PRD1 and ATK1/KATA/KIN14a in the B genome, and MSH2 and SMC1/TITAN8 in the C genome). Reduced seed fertility associated with the loss of chromosome fragments from only one subgenome following homoeologous exchanges could comprise a mechanism for biased genome fractionation in allopolyploids. Pre-existing meiosis gene variants present in allotetraploid parents may help to stabilize meiosis in novel allohexaploids.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilGaebelein, R., Schiessl, S., Samans, B., Batley, J. and Mason, A. (2019) Inherited allelic variants and novel karyotype changes influence fertility and genome stability in Brassica allohexaploids, New Phytologist, 223(2), pp. 965-978. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.15804

APA-ZitierstilGaebelein, R., Schiessl, S., Samans, B., Batley, J., & Mason, A. (2019). Inherited allelic variants and novel karyotype changes influence fertility and genome stability in Brassica allohexaploids. New Phytologist. 223(2), 965-978. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.15804



Schlagwörter


allopolyploidsJUNCEAmeiosis genesNAPUSSPECIES CROSSESsubgenome fractionation

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