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Subgenome Discrimination in Brassica and Raphanus Allopolyploids Using Microsatellites

Authors :
Nomar Espinosa Waminal
Hyun Hee Kim
Nicole Bon Campomayor
Byung Yong Kang
Thi Hong Nguyen
Jin Hoe Huh
Soo-Seong Lee
Source :
Cells, Vol 10, Iss 2358, p 2358 (2021), Cells, Volume 10, Issue 9
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Intergeneric crosses between Brassica species and Raphanus sativus have produced crops with prominent shoot and root systems of Brassica and R. sativus, respectively. It is necessary to discriminate donor genomes when studying cytogenetic stability in distant crosses to identify homologous chromosome pairing, and microsatellite repeats have been used to discriminate subgenomes in allopolyploids. To identify genome-specific microsatellites, we explored the microsatellite content in three Brassica species (B. rapa, AA, B. oleracea, CC, and B. nigra, BB) and R. sativus (RR) genomes, and validated their genome specificity by fluorescence in situ hybridization. We identified three microsatellites showing A, C, and B/R genome specificity. ACBR_msat14 and ACBR_msat20 were detected in the A and C chromosomes, respectively, and ACBR_msat01 was detected in B and R genomes. However, we did not find a microsatellite that discriminated the B and R genomes. The localization of ACBR_msat20 in the 45S rDNA array in ×Brassicoraphanus 977 corroborated the association of the 45S rDNA array with genome rearrangement. Along with the rDNA and telomeric repeat probes, these microsatellites enabled the easy identification of homologous chromosomes. These data demonstrate the utility of microsatellites as probes in identifying subgenomes within closely related Brassica and Raphanus species for the analysis of genetic stability of new synthetic polyploids of these genomes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734409
Volume :
10
Issue :
2358
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cells
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8bea0da3a2c654aabe16ea271d8c01af