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1.
New Phytol ; 237(3): 1040-1049, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36263709

ABSTRACT

Inbreeding depression plays a fundamental role in evolution. To help detect and characterize the loci that underlie inbreeding depression, we used bud pollination and salt treatments to circumvent self-incompatibility (SI) in plants from populations of Leavenworthia alabamica and produced families of progeny that were then genotyped at genetically mapped single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) loci. Using Bayesian inference, the segregation patterns for each SNP were used to explore support for different dominance and selection coefficients at linked viability loci in different genomic regions. There was support for several partially recessive viability loci in one of the populations, and one such locus mapped to the genomic region of the novel SI locus in L. alabamica. These results are consistent with earlier findings that showed purging of inbreeding depression for germination rate in L. alabamica. They are also consistent with expectations from evolutionary genetic theory that recessive, deleterious alleles linked to loci under balancing selection can be sheltered from selection.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae , Inbreeding Depression , Bayes Theorem , Inbreeding , Brassicaceae/genetics , Genotype
2.
New Phytol ; 224(3): 1330-1338, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31131900

ABSTRACT

The extent to which inbreeding depression can be purged is a major determinant of mating system evolution and is important to conservation and crop improvement. Studies of inbreeding depression purging have not been conducted in self-incompatible plants before. An experimental ('ancestral') treatment was first created from self-incompatible plants of Leavenworthia alabamica. Lines derived from this population were maintained by self-pollination for three generations in the attempt to create a 'purged' population with fewer recessive, deleterious mutations of large effect. Fitness components and the frequency of malformed phenotypes were monitored in progeny derived from selfing and outcrossing in the ancestral and purged treatments. Fitness component means and inbreeding depression were largely unchanged by three generations of forced self-pollination, and there was no reduction in the frequency of plants exhibiting malformed phenotypes. Our findings indicate that inbreeding depression in this species is largely a result of mutations of mild effect, consistent with the observation that self-incompatibility is maintained in most populations of L. alabamica, despite the presence of genetic variants with weaker self-incompatibility. Moreover, although population theory suggests that deleterious mutations of large effect should be sheltered from selection in the region of self-incompatibility locus, our results do not support this prediction.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae/physiology , Inbreeding Depression , Self-Incompatibility in Flowering Plants/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Phenotype , Pollination/physiology
3.
New Phytol ; 213(1): 430-439, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27448252

ABSTRACT

Self-incompatibility (SI) promotes outcrossing, but transitions to self-compatibility (SC) are frequent. Population genetic theory describing the breakdown of SI to SC suggests that, under most conditions, populations should be composed of either SI or SC individuals. Under a narrow range of conditions, theory suggests that SI may persist alongside reduced expression of SI (pseudo-SI, PSI) in mixed-mating populations. We studied genetic variation for PSI segregating in four SI populations of Leavenworthia alabamica by measurement of the heritability of pollen tube number after self-pollination. We tested for the role of the S-locus in this variation by sequencing seven S-alleles from plants with high pseudo-SC (PSC) and testing for the co-segregation of these alleles with PSC. We found a continuous distribution of PSC in all populations and 90% of plants exhibited PSC. The heritability ranged from 0.39 to 0.57. All seven S-alleles from plants with high PSC exhibited trans-specific polymorphism, and no stop codons were observed within the c. 600-bp region sequenced. One of these S-alleles was directly associated with the inheritance of PSC. We conclude that heritable variation in PSC is largely a result of genetic variation in the signaling cascade downstream of the S-locus reaction, together with the presence of one leaky S-allele.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae/genetics , Genetic Variation , Self-Incompatibility in Flowering Plants/genetics , Alleles , Analysis of Variance , Genotype , Inbreeding , Inheritance Patterns/genetics , Linear Models , Phenotype , Phylogeny , Pollen Tube/physiology , Regression Analysis
4.
Am J Bot ; 103(7): 1259-71, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27440792

ABSTRACT

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The depiction of polyploid speciation as instantaneous implies that strong prezygotic and postzygotic isolation form as a direct result of whole-genome duplication. However, the direct vs. indirect contributions of genome duplication to phenotypic divergence and prezygotic isolation are rarely quantified across multiple reproductive barriers. METHODS: We compared the phenotypic differences between diploid and both naturally occurring and synthesized tetraploids (neotetraploids) of the plant Chamerion angustifolium. Using this information and additional published values for this species, we compared the magnitude of isolation (ecological, flowering, pollinator, and gametic) between diploids and natural-occurring tetraploids to that between diploids and neotetraploids. KEY RESULTS: Differences among ploidy cytotypes were observed for eight of 12 vegetative and reproductive traits measured. Neotetraploids resembled diploids but differed from natural tetraploids with respect to four traits, including flowering time and plant height. Diploid-neotetraploid (2x-4xneo) experimental arrays exhibited lower pollinator fidelity to cytotype and seed set compared with 2x-4xnat arrays. Based on these results and published evidence, reproductive isolation between diploids and neotetraploids across all four life stages averaged 0.48 and deviated significantly from that between diploids and natural tetraploids (RI = 0.96). CONCLUSIONS: Genome duplication causes phenotypic shifts and contributes directly to prezygotic isolation for some barriers (gametic isolation) but cannot account for the cumulative isolation from diploids observed in natural tetraploids. Therefore, conditions for species formation through genome duplication are not necessarily instantaneous and selection to strengthen prezygotic barriers in young polyploids is critical for the establishment of polyploid species in sympatry.


Subject(s)
Genetic Speciation , Genome, Plant/genetics , Onagraceae/genetics , Ploidies , Diploidy , Flowers/genetics , Flowers/physiology , Onagraceae/physiology , Phenotype , Pollination , Polyploidy , Reproduction , Sympatry , Tetraploidy , Time Factors
5.
Mol Ecol ; 22(7): 1806-19, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23432094

ABSTRACT

Clonal reproduction is associated with the incidence of polyploidy in flowering plants. This pattern may arise through selection for increased clonality in polyploids compared to diploids to reduce mixed-ploidy mating. Here, we test whether clonal reproduction is greater in tetraploid than diploid populations of the mixed-ploidy plant, Chamerion angustifolium, through an analysis of the size and spatial distribution of clones in natural populations using AFLP genotyping and a comparison of root bud production in a greenhouse study. Natural tetraploid populations (N = 5) had significantly more AFLP genotypes (x¯ = 10.8) than diploid populations (x¯ = 6.0). Tetraploid populations tended to have fewer ramets per genotype and fewer genotypes with >1 ramet. In a spatial autocorrelation analysis, ramets within genotypes were more spatially aggregated in diploid populations than in tetraploid populations. In the greenhouse, tetraploids allocated 90.4% more dry mass to root buds than diploids, but tetraploids produced no more root buds and 44% fewer root buds per unit root mass than diploids. Our results indicate that clonal reproduction is significant in most populations, but tetraploid populations are not more clonal than diploids, nor are their clones more spatially aggregated. As a result, tetraploids may be less sheltered from mixed-ploidy mating and diploids more exposed to inbreeding, the balance of which could influence the establishment of tetraploids in diploid populations.


Subject(s)
Diploidy , Onagraceae/genetics , Tetraploidy , Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis , Cloning, Molecular , DNA, Plant/genetics , Genotype , Onagraceae/physiology , Plant Roots/genetics , Reproduction/genetics
6.
Chromosome Res ; 19(6): 825-42, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21870188

ABSTRACT

Flow cytometry has become the dominant method for estimating nuclear DNA content in plants, either for ploidy determination or quantification of absolute genome size. Current best practices for flow cytometry involve the analysis of fresh tissue, however, this imposes significant limitations on the geographic scope and taxonomic diversity of plants that can be included in large-scale genome size studies. Dried tissue has been used increasingly in recent years, but largely in the context of ploidy analysis. Here we test rapid tissue drying with silica gel as a method for use in genome size studies, potentially enabling broader geographic sampling of plants when fresh tissue collection is not feasible. Our results indicate that rapid drying introduces comparatively minor error (<10%), which is similar to the error introduced by other common methodological variations such as instrument. Additionally, the relative effect of drying on genome size and data quality varied between species and buffers. Tissue desiccation provides a promising approach for expanding our knowledge of plant genome size diversity.


Subject(s)
Desiccation/methods , Genome Size , Genome, Plant , DNA, Plant/genetics , Flow Cytometry/methods , Plants/genetics , Ploidies , Reproducibility of Results , Silica Gel
7.
Proc Biol Sci ; 278(1714): 2011-7, 2011 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21123263

ABSTRACT

Conspecific pollen precedence can be a strong reproductive barrier between polyploid and diploid species, but the role of genome multiplication in the evolution of this barrier has not been investigated. Here, we examine the direct effect of genome duplication on the evolution of pollen siring success in tetraploid Chamerion angustifolium. To separate the effects of genome duplication from selection after duplication, we compared pollen siring success of synthesized tetraploids (neotetraploids) with that of naturally occurring tetraploids by applying 2x, 4x (neo or established) or 2x + 4x pollen to diploid and tetraploid flowers. Seed set increased in diploids and decreased in both types of tetraploids as the proportion of pollen from diploid plants increased. Based on offspring ploidy from mixed-ploidy pollinations, pollen of the maternal ploidy always sired the majority of offspring but was strongest in established tetraploids and weakest in neotetraploids. Pollen from established tetraploids had significantly higher siring rates than neotetraploids when deposited on diploid (4x(est) = 47.2%, 4x(neo) = 27.1%) and on tetraploid recipients (4x(est) = 91.9%, 4x(neo) = 56.0%). Siring success of established tetraploids exceeded that of neotetraploids despite having similar pollen production per anther and pollen diameter. Our results suggest that, while pollen precedence can arise in association with the duplication event, the strength of polyploid siring success evolves after the duplication event.


Subject(s)
Gene Duplication , Genome, Plant , Onagraceae/genetics , Pollen/physiology , Biological Evolution , Onagraceae/physiology , Reproduction , Tetraploidy
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