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Comparative transmission genetics of introgressed chromatin in Gossypium (cotton) polyploids

Authors :
Peng W. Chee
John R. Gannaway
Junkang Rong
Carl J. Rogers
Andrew H. Paterson
John E. Bowers
V. N. Waghmare
Ishwarappa S. Katageri
Source :
American Journal of Botany. 103:719-729
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Premise of the study Introgression is widely acknowledged as a potential source of valuable genetic variation, and growing effort is being invested in analysis of interspecific crosses conferring transgressive variation. Experimental backcross populations provide an opportunity to study transmission genetics following interspecific hybridization, identifying opportunities and constraints to introgressive crop improvement. The evolutionary consequences of introgression have been addressed at the theoretical level, however, issues related to levels and patterns of introgression among (plant) species remain inadequately explored, including such factors as polyploidization, subgenome interaction inhabiting a common nucleus, and the genomic distribution and linkage relationships of introgressant alleles. Methods We analyze introgression into the polyploid Gossypium hirsutum (upland cotton) from its sister G. tomentosum and compare the level and pattern with that of G. barbadense representing a different clade tracing to the same polyploidization. Key results Across the genome, recurrent backcrossing to Gossypium hirsutum yielded only one-third of the expected average frequency of the G. tomentosum allele, although one unusual region showed preferential introgression. Although a similar rate of introgression is found in the two subgenomes of polyploid (AtDt) G. hirsutum, a preponderance of multilocus interactions were largely within the Dt subgenome. Conclusions Skewed G. tomentosum chromatin transmission is polymorphic among two elite G. hirsutum genotypes, which suggests that genetic background may profoundly affect introgression of particular chromosomal regions. Only limited correspondence is found between G. hirsutum chromosomal regions that are intolerant to introgression from the two species, G. barbadense and G. tomentosum, concentrated near possible inversion polymorphisms. Complex transmission of introgressed chromatin highlights the challenges to utilization of exotic germplasm in crop improvement.

Details

ISSN :
15372197 and 00029122
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Botany
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....853e72e14622af5345fb0162cab322f1