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Analysis of two abundant, highly related satellites in the allotetraploid Nicotiana arentsii using double-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and sequencing
R. Matyasek, J. Fulnecek, AR. Leitch, A. Kovarik,
Language English Country Great Britain
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
NLK
Free Medical Journals
from 1902 to 1 year ago
Wiley Online Library (archiv)
from 1902-01-01 to 2012-12-31
Wiley Free Content
from 1997 to 1 year ago
- MeSH
- Chromosomes, Plant genetics MeSH
- Diploidy MeSH
- Species Specificity MeSH
- Phylogeny MeSH
- Genome, Plant genetics MeSH
- Karyotyping MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Conformation MeSH
- Molecular Sequence Data MeSH
- Polymorphism, Genetic MeSH
- Polyploidy MeSH
- Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid genetics MeSH
- DNA, Satellite genetics isolation & purification MeSH
- Sequence Analysis, DNA methods MeSH
- Blotting, Southern MeSH
- Nicotiana genetics MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
• Allopolyploidy, a driving force in plant evolution, can induce rapid structural changes in parental subgenomes. Here, we examined the fate of homologous subtelomeric satellites in intrasection allotetraploid Nicotiana arentsii formed from N. undulata and N. wigandioides progenitors < 200,000 yr ago. • We cloned and sequenced a number of monomers from progenitors and the allotetraploid. Structural features of both cloned and genomic monomers were studied using double-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. • Two homologous satellites were isolated from N. undulata (called NUNSSP) and N. wigandioides (NWISSP). While the NUNSSP monomers were highly homogeneous in nucleotide sequences, the NWISSP monomers formed two separate clades. Likewise, the genomic NUNSSP monomers showed less DNA conformation heterogeneity than NWISSP monomers, with distinct conformations. While both satellites predominantly occupy subtelomeric positions, a fraction of the NWISSP repeats was found in an intercalary location, supporting the hypothesis that dispersion prevents the repeats becoming homogeneous. Sequence, structural and chromosomal features of the parental satellites were faithfully inherited by N. arentsii. • Our study revealed that intergenomic homogenization of subtelomeric satellite repeats does not occur in N. arentsii allotetraploid. We propose that the sequence and structural divergence of subtelomeric satellites may render allopolyploid chromosomes less vulnerable to intergenomic exchanges.
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