4.5 Article

COMPLEX PATTERNS OF AUTOPOLYPLOID EVOLUTION IN ALFALFA AND ALLIES (MEDICAGO SATIVA; LEGUMINOSAE)

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 98, Issue 10, Pages 1633-1646

Publisher

BOTANICAL SOC AMER INC
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1000318

Keywords

alfalfa; autopolyploidy; cpDNA haplotypes; Leguminosae; network analysis; Medicago; Medicago sativa

Categories

Funding

  1. Office of the Higher Education Commission, the Royal Thai Government
  2. NSF [DEB-0516673]
  3. USDA-DOE [2006-35300-17224]

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Premise of the study: Although there is growing evidence that autopolyploidy is a widespread and important evolutionary phenomenon, it has received less attention than allopolyploidy. Medicago sativa comprises several diploid and autopolyploid taxa, including autotetraploid cultivated alfalfa, and affords an opportunity to elucidate the evolutionary history of a morphologically and genetically complex autopolyploid system. Methods: Phylogenies and haplotype networks were constructed from two chloroplast noncoding regions (rpl20-rps12 and trnS-trnG spacers) across seven diploid and polyploid infraspecific taxa of M. sativa and five additional closely related Medicago species, and genetic differentiation was estimated. Key results: The two most prominent M. sativa autopolyploids have contrasting evolutionary histories. Chloroplast data support a simple autopolyploid origin of subsp. sativa (alfalfa) from diploid subsp. caerulea, from which it is distinguishable in several quantitative characters. In contrast, morphologically identical diploid and autopolyploid cytotypes of subsp. falcata were found to possess very different chloroplast haplotypes, suggesting past introgression from M. prostrata into the polyploid. Despite the presence of hybrids between tetraploid subspecies falcata and sativa, there was little evidence of introgression of chloroplast genomes from either subspecies into the other. Conclusions: Autopolyploid evolution in M. sativa is complicated and has followed very different paths in different subspecific taxa. The potential exists for gene flow in virtually all combinations of subspecies both within and between ploidies, yet despite the existence of hybrids, morphologically and genetically distinctive subspecies persist.

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