Publication details

Ancestral Chromosomal Blocks Are Triplicated in Brassiceae Species with Varying Chromosome Number and Genome Size

Authors

LYSÁK Martin CHEUNG Kwok KITSCHKE Michaela BUREŠ Petr

Year of publication 2007
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Plant Physiology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web http://www.plantphysiol.org/content/plantphysiol/145/2/402.full.pdf
Field Botany
Keywords chromosomel painting; genome size; chromosomal evolution; paleopolyploidy
Description Comparative painting analysis of block F of the crucifer Ancestral Karyotype (AK; n=8), consisting of 24 conserved genomic blocks, in 10 species traditionally treated as members of the tribe Brassiceae. Three homeologous copies of block F were identified per haploid chromosome complement in Brassiceae with 2n=14, 18, 20, 32, and 36. In high-polyploid Crambe maritima (2n=60), C. cordifolia (2n=120), and Vella pseudocytisus (2n=68), 6, 12, and 6 copies have been revealed, respectively. In subtribe Zillineae, two of the three homeologous regions were combined via a reciprocal translocation onto one chromosome. Altogether, these findings provide compelling evidence of an ancient hexaploidization event and corresponding whole-genome triplication shared by the tribe Brassiceae. Only two homeologous copies of block F suggest a whole-genome duplication but not the triplication event in Orychophragmus violaceus (2n=24), and confirm its phylogenetic position outside the tribe Brassiceae.
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