Parental transposable element loads influence their dynamics in young Nicotiana hybrids and allotetraploids
Jazyk angličtina Země Velká Británie, Anglie Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
Grantová podpora
BTH01453
Association pour la Recherche sur les Nicotianées - International
ANR-05-BDIV-015
Agence Nationale de la Recherche - International
09150SH
Campus France - International
08782YM
Campus France - International
PubMed
30220091
DOI
10.1111/nph.15484
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Nicotiana arentsii, Nicotiana rustica, Nicotiana tabacum, allopolyploidy, evolution, genome shock, sequence-specific amplification polymorphism (SSAP), transposable element,
- MeSH
- fylogeneze MeSH
- genetická variace MeSH
- genetické lokusy MeSH
- hybridizace genetická * MeSH
- polyploidie * MeSH
- sekvence nukleotidů MeSH
- tabák genetika MeSH
- transpozibilní elementy DNA genetika MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- transpozibilní elementy DNA MeSH
The genomic shock hypothesis suggests that allopolyploidy is associated with genome changes driven by transposable elements, as a response to imbalances between parental insertion loads. To explore this hypothesis, we compared three allotetraploids, Nicotiana arentsii, N. rustica and N. tabacum, which arose over comparable time frames from hybridisation between increasingly divergent diploid species. We used sequence-specific amplification polymorphism (SSAP) to compare the dynamics of six transposable elements in these allopolyploids, their diploid progenitors and in corresponding synthetic hybrids. We show that element-specific dynamics in young Nicotiana allopolyploids reflect their dynamics in diploid progenitors. Transposable element mobilisation is not concomitant with immediate genome merger, but occurs within the first generations of allopolyploid formation. In natural allopolyploids, such mobilisations correlate with imbalances in the repeat profile of the parental species, which increases with their genetic divergence. Other restructuring leading to locus loss is immediate, nonrandom and targeted at specific subgenomes, independently of cross orientation. The correlation between transposable element mobilisation in allopolyploids and quantitative imbalances in parental transposable element loads supports the genome shock hypothesis proposed by McClintock.
Ecological Genomics Institute of Plant Sciences University of Bern Bern CH 3013 Switzerland
Institut Jean Pierre Bourgin INRA AgroParisTech CNRS Université Paris Saclay 78000 Versailles France
Institute of Biophysics Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Brno CZ 61265 Czech Republic
Leaf Research Imperial Brands 24100 Bergerac France
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Queen Mary University of London London E1 4NS UK
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
Competition of Parental Genomes in Plant Hybrids