Chromosomal and genome-wide molecular changes associated with initial stages of allohexaploidization in wheat can be transit and incidental

Author:

Zhao Na1,Xu Liying1,Zhu Bo1,Li Mingjiu1,Zhang Huakun1,Qi Bao2,Xu Chunming1,Han Fangpu2,Liu Bao1

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Molecular Epigenetics of the Ministry of Education, Institute of Genetics & Cytology, Northeast Normal University, Changchun 130024, China.

2. State Key Laboratory of Plant Chromosome & Cell Engineering, Institute of Genetics & Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 101110, China.

Abstract

Genomic instability can be induced by nascent allopolyploidization in plants. However, most previous studies have not defined to what extent the allopolyploidy-induced rapid genomic instability represents a general response, and hence important to evolution, or merely incidental events occurring stochastically in a limited number of individuals. We report here that in a newly formed allohexaploid wheat line between tetraploid wheat Triticum turgidum subsp. durum (genome BBAA) and Aegilops tauschii (genome DD) a great majority of individual plants showed chromosomal stability and exhibited a genomic constitution similar to that of the present-day Triticum aestivum (genome BBAADD). In contrast, a single individual plant was identified at S2, which exhibited chromosomal instability in both number and structure based on multicolor genomic in situ hybridization (mc-GISH) analysis. Accordingly, this plant also manifested extensive changes at the molecular level including loss and gain of DNA segments and DNA methylation repatterning. Remarkably, the chromosomal and molecular instabilities that presumably occurred at S0to S1and (or) in the F1hybrid were rapidly quenched by S2and followed by stable transgenerational inheritance. Our results suggest that these stochastic and individual-specific rapid genomic changes, albeit interesting, probably have not played a major role in the speciation and evolution of common wheat, T. aestivum.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

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