Plants (Sep 2020)

Genome Size and Chromosome Number Evolution in Korean <i>Iris</i> L. Species (Iridaceae Juss.)

  • Bokyung Choi,
  • Hanna Weiss-Schneeweiss,
  • Eva M. Temsch,
  • Soonku So,
  • Hyeon-Ho Myeong,
  • Tae-Soo Jang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants9101284
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 1284

Abstract

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Chromosome numbers, karyotypes, and genome sizes of 14 Iris L. (Iridaceae Juss.) species in Korea and their closely related taxon, Sisyrinchium rosulatum, are presented and analyzed in a phylogenetic framework. To date, understanding the chromosomal evolution of Korean irises has been hampered by their high chromosome numbers. Here, we report analyses of chromosome numbers and karyotypes obtained via classic Feulgen staining and genome sizes measured using flow cytometry in Korean irises. More than a two-fold variation in chromosome numbers (2n = 22 to 2n = 50) and over a three-fold genome size variation (2.39 pg to 7.86 pg/1 C) suggest the putative polyploid and/or dysploid origin of some taxa. Our study demonstrates that the patterns of genome size variation and chromosome number changes in Korean irises do not correlate with the phylogenetic relationships and could have been affected by different evolutionary processes involving polyploidy or dysploidy. This study presents the first comprehensive chromosomal and genome size data for Korean Iris species. Further studies involving molecular cytogenetic and phylogenomic analyses are needed to interpret the mechanisms involved in the origin of chromosomal variation in the Iris.

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