• This record comes from PubMed

Molecular cytogenetics in artificial hybrid and highly polyploid sturgeons: An evolutionary story narrated by repetitive sequences

. 2013 ; 141 (2-3) : 153-62. [epub] 20130914

Language English Country Switzerland Media print-electronic

Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

We applied comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) and genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) to examine genomes of artificially produced sturgeon hybrids between sterlet, Acipenser ruthenus female (∼120 chromosomes) or Russian sturgeon, A. gueldenstaedtii female (∼240 chromosomes) and a spontaneous triploid Siberian sturgeon A. baerii male (∼360 chromosomes), respectively. The ploidy levels of progenies were analyzed by karyotyping and flow cytometry. We found that the species-specific regions were surprisingly identifiable only on some micro- and small(er) macrochromosomes in hybrid metaphases. We hypothesize that these distinguishable regions are represented by species-specific repetitive sequences driven by more dynamic molecular evolutionary mechanisms. On larger chromosomes, GISH faintly visualized only blocks of pericentromeric and telomeric repetitive sequences, remaining regions were equally shared by both parental species. We concluded that the interspecies hybridization producing viable and even fertile progeny is enabled by the fact that genomes of the species involved are likely divergent at the level of the repetitive sequences only and probably highly conserved in the coding sequences. These small differences of coding sequences are in concordance with previous estimations of relatedness of examined species producing artificial as well as natural hybrids. CGH and GISH represent a challenge in sturgeon cytogenetics as a valuable though technically not simple tool to discriminate chromosomes of parental species in hybrids. The potentials and drawbacks of CGH and GISH application in sturgeons are discussed and further experimental possibilities are proposed.

References provided by Crossref.org

Newest 20 citations...

See more in
Medvik | PubMed

GC and Repeats Profiling along Chromosomes-The Future of Fish Compositional Cytogenomics

. 2020 Dec 31 ; 12 (1) : . [epub] 20201231

Taxonomic Diversity Not Associated with Gross Karyotype Differentiation: The Case of Bighead Carps, Genus Hypophthalmichthys (Teleostei, Cypriniformes, Xenocyprididae)

. 2020 Apr 28 ; 11 (5) : . [epub] 20200428

An Insight into the Chromosomal Evolution of Lebiasinidae (Teleostei, Characiformes)

. 2020 Mar 28 ; 11 (4) : . [epub] 20200328

Deciphering the Evolutionary History of Arowana Fishes (Teleostei, Osteoglossiformes, Osteoglossidae): Insight from Comparative Cytogenomics

. 2019 Sep 02 ; 20 (17) : . [epub] 20190902

Dynamics of tandemly repeated DNA sequences during evolution of diploid and tetraploid botiid loaches (Teleostei: Cobitoidea: Botiidae)

. 2018 ; 13 (3) : e0195054. [epub] 20180328

Sex Chromosome Evolution and Genomic Divergence in the Fish Hoplias malabaricus (Characiformes, Erythrinidae)

. 2018 ; 9 () : 71. [epub] 20180305

Molecular cytogenetic differentiation of paralogs of Hox paralogs in duplicated and re-diploidized genome of the North American paddlefish (Polyodon spathula)

. 2017 Mar 02 ; 18 (1) : 19. [epub] 20170302

Asexual Reproduction Does Not Apparently Increase the Rate of Chromosomal Evolution: Karyotype Stability in Diploid and Triploid Clonal Hybrid Fish (Cobitis, Cypriniformes, Teleostei)

. 2016 ; 11 (1) : e0146872. [epub] 20160125

Find record

Citation metrics

Loading data ...

Archiving options

Loading data ...