1. Analysis of the possible cytogenetic mechanism for overcoming hybrid lethality in an interspecific cross between Nicotiana suaveolens and Nicotiana tabacum.
- Author
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Nakata K, Nagashima H, Inaba N, Yamashita H, Shinozaki Y, Kanekatsu M, Marubashi W, and Yamada T
- Subjects
- Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes, Plant genetics, Genes, Plant, Genomic Instability genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Reproduction, Seedlings genetics, Crosses, Genetic, Cytogenetic Analysis methods, Hybridization, Genetic genetics, Plant Breeding methods, Nicotiana classification, Nicotiana genetics
- Abstract
Hybrid lethality is a type of reproductive isolation in which hybrids die before maturation, due to the interaction between the two causative genes derived from each of the hybrid parents. The interspecific hybrid of Nicotiana suaveolens × Nicotiana tabacum is a model plant used in studies on hybrid lethality. While most of the progeny produced from such a cross die, some individuals grow normally and mature. Separately, a technique for producing mature hybrids by artificial culture has been developed. However, the mechanism by which hybrids overcome lethality, either spontaneously or by artificial culture, remains unclear. In the present study, we found that some hybrids that overcome lethality, either spontaneously or by artificial culture, lack the distal part of the Q chromosome, a region that includes the gene responsible for lethality. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction results suggested that the distal deletion of the Q chromosome, detected in some hybrid seedlings that overcome lethality, is caused by reciprocal translocations between homoeologous chromosomes. The results showed that chromosomal instability during meiosis in amphidiploid N. tabacum as well as during artificial culturing of hybrid seedlings is involved in overcoming hybrid lethality in interspecific crosses of the genus Nicotiana.
- Published
- 2021
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