4.8 Article

Single-copy gene-based chromosome painting in cucumber and its application for chromosome rearrangement analysis in Cucumis

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 78, Issue 1, Pages 169-179

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.12453

Keywords

fluorescence in situ hybridization; chromosome rearrangement; Cucumis sativus; single-copy gene; technical advance; chromosome painting

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2012CB113900]
  2. '863' Project [2012AA100102]
  3. General Programs from the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31272174, U1178307]
  4. '111' Project [B08025]
  5. National Key Technology R&D Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2013BAD01B04-10]

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Chromosome painting based on fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has played an important role in chromosome identification and research into chromosome rearrangements, diagnosis of chromosome abnormalities and evolution in human and animal species. However, it has not been applied widely in plants due to the large amounts of dispersed repetitive sequences in chromosomes. In the present work, a chromosome painting method for single-copy gene pools in Cucumis sativus was successfully developed. Gene probes with sizes above 2kb were detected consistently. A cucumber karyotype was constructed based on FISH using a cocktail containing chromosome-specific gene probes. This single-copy gene-based chromosome painting (ScgCP) technique was performed by PCR amplification, purification, pooling, labeling and hybridization onto chromosome spreads. Gene pools containing sequential genes with an interval less than 300kb yielded painting patterns on pachytene chromosomes. Seven gene pools corresponding to individual chromosomes unambiguously painted each chromosome pair of C.sativus. Three mis-aligned regions on chromosome4 were identified by the painting patterns. A probe pool comprising 133 genes covering the 8Mb distal end of chromosome4 was used to evaluate the potential utility of the ScgCP technique for chromosome rearrangement research through cross-species FISH in the Cucumis genus. Distinct painting patterns of this region were observed in C.sativus, C.melo and C.metuliferus species. A comparative chromosome map of this region was constructed between cucumber and melon. With increasing sequence resources, this ScgCP technique may be applied on any other sequenced species for chromosome painting research.

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