International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2019)

Instability of Alien Chromosome Introgressions in Wheat Associated with Improper Positioning in the Nucleus

  • Kateřina Perničková,
  • Veronika Koláčková,
  • Adam J. Lukaszewski,
  • Chaolan Fan,
  • Jan Vrána,
  • Martin Duchoslav,
  • Glyn Jenkins,
  • Dylan Phillips,
  • Olga Šamajová,
  • Michaela Sedlářová,
  • Jozef Šamaj,
  • Jaroslav Doležel,
  • David Kopecký

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20061448
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 6
p. 1448

Abstract

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Alien introgressions introduce beneficial alleles into existing crops and hence, are widely used in plant breeding. Generally, introgressed alien chromosomes show reduced meiotic pairing relative to the host genome, and may be eliminated over generations. Reduced pairing appears to result from a failure of some telomeres of alien chromosomes to incorporate into the leptotene bouquet at the onset of meiosis, thereby preventing chiasmate pairing. In this study, we analysed somatic nuclei of rye introgressions in wheat using 3D-FISH and found that while introgressed rye chromosomes or chromosome arms occupied discrete positions in the Rabl’s orientation similar to chromosomes of the wheat host, their telomeres frequently occupied positions away from the nuclear periphery. The frequencies of such abnormal telomere positioning were similar to the frequencies of out-of-bouquet telomere positioning at leptotene, and of pairing failure at metaphase I. This study indicates that improper positioning of alien chromosomes that leads to reduced pairing is not a strictly meiotic event but rather a consequence of a more systemic problem. Improper positioning in the nuclei probably impacts the ability of introgressed chromosomes to migrate into the telomere bouquet at the onset of meiosis, preventing synapsis and chiasma establishment, and leading to their gradual elimination over generations.

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