Yongji Huang, Hong Chen, Jinlei Han, Ya Zhang, Shulin Ma, Guangrun Yu, Zonghua Wang, Kai Wang
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Species-specific abundant retrotransposons elucidate the genomic composition of modern sugarcane cultivars.
Modern sugarcane cultivars are highly polyploid and derived from the hybridization of Saccharum officinarum and S. spontaneum, thus leading to singularly complex genomes. The complex genome has hindered the study of genomic structures. Here, we adopted a computational strategy to isolate highly repetitive and abundant sequences in either S. officinarum or S. spontaneum and isolated four S. spontaneum-enriched retrotransposons. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assays with these repetitive DNA sequences generated whole-genome painting signals for S. spontaneum but not for S. officinarum. We demonstrated that these repetitive sequence-based probes distinguish the parental S. spontaneum genome in hybrids derived from crosses between it and S. officinarum. A cytological analysis of 14 modern sugarcane cultivars revealed that the percentages of chromosomes with introgressive S. spontaneum fragments ranged from 11.9 to 40.9% and substantially exceeded those determined for previously investigated cultivars (5-13%). The comparatively higher percentages of introgressive S. spontaneum fragments detected in the aforementioned cultivars indicate frequent recombination between parental genomes. Here, we present the application of our strategy to isolate species-specific cytological markers. This information may help to elucidate complex plant genomic structures and trace their evolutionary histories.
期刊介绍:
Chromosoma publishes research and review articles on the functional organization of the eukaryotic cell nucleus, with a particular emphasis on the structure and dynamics of chromatin and chromosomes; the expression and replication of genomes; genome organization and evolution; the segregation of genomes during meiosis and mitosis; the function and dynamics of subnuclear compartments; the nuclear envelope and nucleocytoplasmic interactions, and more.
The scope of Chromosoma encompasses genetic, biophysical, molecular and cell biological studies.
Average time from receipt of contributions to first decision: 22 days
Publishes research and review articles on the functional organization of the eukaryotic cell nucleus
Topics include structure and dynamics of chromatin and chromosomes; the expression and replication of genomes; genome organization and evolution; the segregation of genomes during meiosis and mitosis and more
Encompasses genetic, biophysical, molecular and cell biological studies.