What nature separated, and human joined together: About a spontaneous hybridization between two allopatric dogwood species (Cornus controversa and C. Alternifolia)

3Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

In this study, possible hybridization between two allopatric species, Cornus controversa and Cornus alternifolia, was explored using molecular and morphological approaches. Scanning electron microscope analyses of the adaxial and the abaxial leaf surfaces yielded a few new not yet described characters typical for the particular species and intermediate for hybrids. With the use of 14 Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA and 5 Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism primer combinations, 44 fragments species specific to C. controversa and 51 species specific to C. alternifolia were obtained. Most of these bands were also found in putative hybrids. All clustering analyses based on binary data combined from both methods confirmed a separate and intermediate status of the hybrids. Hybrid index estimates for hybrids C1-C5 indicated that all were the first generation of offspring (F1). Chloroplast intergenic spacers (trnF-trnL and psbC-trnS) were used to infer the hybridization direction. Based on the assumption of maternal inheritance of chloroplast DNA, C. controversa seems to be the maternal parent of the hybrid. Internal transcribed spacer sequences of the five hybrids analyzed here indicated higher similarity with the sequences of C. controversa (all shared the majority of its single nucleotide polymorphisms). Sequence analysis of PI-like genes fully confirmed the hybrid origin of C1-C5 hybrids. Our results also showed that two specimens in the C. alternifolia group, A1 and A3, are not free of introgression. They are probably repeated backcrosses toward C. alternifolia. Furthermore, molecular data seem to point not only to unidirectional introgression toward C. controversa (the presence of hybrids) but to bidirectional introgression as well, since the presence of markers specific for C. controversa in the profiles of C. alternifolia specimen A3 was observed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Słomski, R., Gawrońska, B., Morozowska, M., Nuc, K., & Kosiński, P. (2019). What nature separated, and human joined together: About a spontaneous hybridization between two allopatric dogwood species (Cornus controversa and C. Alternifolia). PLoS ONE, 14(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226985

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free