4.7 Article

Asynapsis and unreduced gamete formation in a Trifolium interspecific hybrid

Journal

BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12870-021-03403-w

Keywords

Unreduced gametes; Asynapsis; Meiotic nonreduction; Trifolium; Interspecific hybridization; Polyploidization

Categories

Funding

  1. AgResearch Ltd. [9957/2, 9957/3]
  2. New Zealand Foundation for Research, Science and Technology [C10X0711]

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The study revealed that the formation of 2n gametes occurred when there was a high frequency of asynapsis, and normal gamete production was restored when the frequency of asynapsis was low. These findings align well with previous studies in wheat and other organisms and suggest common molecular mechanisms involved in unreduced gamete formation.
Background Unreduced gametes, a driving force in the widespread polyploidization and speciation of flowering plants, occur relatively frequently in interspecific or intergeneric hybrids. Studies of the mechanisms leading to 2n gamete formation, mainly in the wheat tribe Triticeae have shown that unreductional meiosis is often associated with chromosome asynapsis during the first meiotic division. The present study explored the mechanisms of meiotic nonreduction leading to functional unreduced gametes in an interspecific Trifolium (clover) hybrid with three sub-genomes from T. ambiguum and one sub-genome from T. occidentale. Results Unreductional meiosis leading to 2n gametes occurred when there was a high frequency of asynapsis during the first meiotic division. In this hybrid, approximately 39% of chromosomes were unpaired at metaphase I. Within the same cell at anaphase I, sister chromatids of univalents underwent precocious separation and formed laggard chromatids whereas paired chromosomes segregated without separation of sister chromatids as in normal meiosis. This asynchrony was frequently accompanied by incomplete or no movement of chromosomes toward the poles and restitution leading to unreduced chromosome constitutions. Reductional meiosis was restored in progeny where asynapsis frequencies were low. Two progeny plants with approximately 5 and 7% of unpaired chromosomes at metaphase I showed full restoration of reductional meiosis. Conclusions The study revealed that formation of 2n gametes occurred when asynapsis (univalent) frequency at meiosis I was high, and that normal gamete production was restored in the next generation when asynapsis frequencies were low. Asynapsis-dependent 2n gamete formation, previously supported by evidence largely from wheat and its relatives and grasshopper, is also applicable to hybrids from the dicotyledonous plant genus Trifolium. The present results align well with those from these widely divergent organisms and strongly suggest common molecular mechanisms involved in unreduced gamete formation.

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