• Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco, 2n = 4x = 48) is a natural allotetraploid combining two ancestral genomes closely related to modern Nicotiana sylvestris and Nicotiana tomentosiformis. Here we examine the immediate consequences of allopolyploidy on genome evolution using 20 S 4-generation plants derived from a single synthetic, S0 plant made by Burk in 1973 (Th37). • Using molecular and cytogenetic methods we analysed 14 middle and highly repetitive sequences that together total ≈ 4% of the genome. • Two repeats related to endogenous geminiviruses (GRD5) and pararetroviruses (NtoEPRV), and two classes of satellite repeats (NTRS, A1/A2) were partially or completely eliminated at variable frequency (25-60%). These sequences are all from the N. tomentosiformis parent. Genomic in situ hybridization revealed additivity in chromosome numbers in two plants (2n = 48), while a third was aneuploid for an N. tomentosiformis-origin chromosome (2n = 49). Two plants had homozygous translocations between chromosomes of the S- and T-genomes. • The data demonstrate that genetic changes in synthetic tobacco were fast, targeted to the paternal N. tomentosiformis-donated genome, and some of the changes showed concordance with changes that presumably occurred during evolution of natural tobacco. © New Phytologist (2005).
CITATION STYLE
Skalická, K., Lim, K. Y., Matyasek, R., Matzke, M., Leitch, A. R., & Kovarik, A. (2005). Preferential elimination of repeated DNA sequences from the paternal, Nicotiana tomentosiformis genome donor of a synthetic, allotetraploid tobacco. New Phytologist, 166(1), 291–303. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.2004.01297.x
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