The type of ploidy of chrysanthemum is not black or white: a comparison of a molecular approach to published cytological methods

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Klie, Maik; Schie, Stephan; Linde, Marcus; Debener, Thomas: The type of ploidy of chrysanthemum is not black or white: a comparison of a molecular approach to published cytological methods. In: Frontiers in Plant Science 5 (2014). DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2014.00479

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Abstract: 
Polyploidy is a widespread phenomenon among higher plants and a major factor shaping the structure and evolution of plant genomes. The important ornamental chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum indicum hybrid) possesses a hexaploid genome with 54 chromosomes and was classified based on its evolutionary origin and cytological methods as an allopolyploid. However, it is questionable whether cytological methods are sufficient to determine the type of ploidy, and there are more informative methods available based on molecular marker analyses. Therefore, we collected segregation data for 406 dominant molecular marker alleles [327 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLPs), 65 single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCPs) and 14 microsatellites (EST-SSRs)] in a biparental F1 population of 160 individuals. We analyzed these data for the characteristics that differ between allopolyploids and autopolyploids, including the segregation ratio of each marker, the ratio of single-dose (SD) to multi-dose (MD) markers, the ratio of SD markers in coupling to those in repulsion and the banding patterns of the SSRs. Whereas the analysis of the segregation ratio of each polymorphic marker indicated disomic (13 markers) as well as hexasomic (eight markers) inheritance, the ratio of SD markers in coupling to those in repulsion was 1:0, which is characteristic of autopolyploids. The observed ratio of SD to MD markers was 0.67:0.33 which is significantly different to the expected segregation for auto- and allohexaploids. Furthermore, the three EST-SSR alleles were inherited in all possible combinations and were not independent of each other, as expected for fixed heterozygosity in allopolyploids. Combining our results with published cytological data indicates that cultivated chrysanthemums should be classified as segmental allohexaploids.
License of this version: CC BY 4.0 Unported
Document Type: Article
Publishing status: publishedVersion
Issue Date: 2014-09-23
Appears in Collections:Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät

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1 image of flag of Germany Germany 182 75.52%
2 image of flag of United States United States 20 8.30%
3 image of flag of China China 15 6.22%
4 image of flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom 3 1.24%
5 image of flag of Canada Canada 3 1.24%
6 image of flag of No geo information available No geo information available 2 0.83%
7 image of flag of Russian Federation Russian Federation 2 0.83%
8 image of flag of Indonesia Indonesia 2 0.83%
9 image of flag of Netherlands Netherlands 1 0.41%
10 image of flag of Jordan Jordan 1 0.41%
    other countries 10 4.15%

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