Abstract
Allopolyploidization plays an important role in speciation, and some natural or synthetic allopolyploid fishes have been extensively applied to aquaculture. Although genetic and epigenetic inheritance and variation associated with plant allopolyploids have been well documented, the relative research in allopolyploid animals is scarce. In this study, the genome constitution and DNA methylation inheritance in a newly synthetic allopolyploid of gynogenetic gibel carp were analyzed. The incorporation of a whole genome of paternal common carp sperm in the allopolyploid was confirmed by genomic in situ hybridization, chromosomelocalization of 45S rDNAs, and sequencecomparison. Pooledsample-based methylation sensitive amplifiedpolymorphism (MSAP) revealed that an overwhelming majority (98.82%) of cytosine methylation patterns in the allopolyploid were inherited from its parents of hexaploid gibel carp clone D and common carp. Compared to its parents, 11 DNA fragments in the allopolyploid were proved to be caused by interindividual variation, recombination, deletion, and mutation through individual sample-based MSAP and sequencing. Contrast to the rapid and remarkable epigenetic changes in most of analyzed neopolyploids, no cytosine methylation variation was detected in the gynogenetic allopolyploid. Therefore, the newly synthetic allopolyploid of gynogenetic gibel carpcombined genomesfromits parents andmaintainedgenetic andepigenetic stability after its formation and subsequently seven successive gynogenetic generations. Our current results provide a paradigmfor recurrent polyploidy consequences in the gynogenetic allopolyploid animals.
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Shao, G. M., Li, X. Y., Wang, Y., Wang, Z. W., Li, Z., Zhang, X. J., … Gui, J. F. (2018). Whole genome incorporation and epigenetic stability in a newly synthetic allopolyploid of gynogenetic gibel carp. Genome Biology and Evolution, 10(9), 2394–2407. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evy165
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