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1.
Genome Biol Evol ; 6(9): 2439-43, 2014 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25193309

ABSTRACT

The coordination between nuclear and organellar genes is essential to many aspects of eukaryotic life, including basic metabolism, energy production, and ultimately, organismal fitness. Although nuclear genes are biparentally inherited, mitochondrial and chloroplast genes are almost exclusively maternally inherited, and this asymmetry may lead to a bias in the chromosomal distribution of nuclear genes whose products act in the mitochondria or chloroplasts. In particular, because X-linked genes have a higher probability of cotransmission with organellar genes (2/3) compared with autosomal genes (1/2), selection for coadaptation has been predicted to lead to an overrepresentation of nuclear-mitochondrial and nuclear-chloroplast genes on the X chromosome relative to autosomes. In contrast, the occurrence of sexually antagonistic organellar mutations might lead to selection for movement of cytonuclear genes from the X chromosome to autosomes to reduce male mutation load. Recent broad-scale comparative studies of N-mt distributions in animals have found evidence for these hypotheses in some species, but not others. Here, we use transcriptome sequences to conduct the first study of the chromosomal distribution of cytonuclear interacting genes in a plant species with sex chromosomes (Rumex hastatulus; Polygonaceae). We found no evidence of under- or overrepresentation of either N-mt or N-cp genes on the X chromosome, and thus no support for either the coadaptation or the sexual-conflict hypothesis. We discuss how our results from a species with recently evolved sex chromosomes fit into an emerging picture of the evolutionary forces governing the chromosomal distribution of nuclear-mitochondrial and nuclear-chloroplast genes.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Rumex/genetics , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Chloroplasts/genetics , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Chromosomes, Plant/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Germ Cells, Plant/cytology , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondria/metabolism , Rumex/cytology
2.
Folia Histochem Cytobiol ; 43(3): 161-7, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16201317

ABSTRACT

Condensed Y chromosomes in Rumex acetosa L. root-tip nuclei were studied using 5-azaC treatment and immunohistochemical detection of methylated histones. Although Y chromosomes were decondensed within root meristem in vivo, they became condensed and heteropycnotic in roots cultured in vitro. 5-azacytidine (5-azaC) treatment of cultured roots caused transitional dispersion of their Y chromosome bodies, but 7 days after removal of the drug from the culture medium, Y heterochromatin recondensed and again became visible. The response of Rumex sex chromatin to 5-azaC was compared with that of condensed segments of pericentromeric heterochromatin in Rhoeo spathacea (Sw.) Steam roots. It was shown that Rhoeo chromocentres, composed of AT-rich constitutive heterochromatin, did not undergo decondensation after 5-azaC treatment. The Y-bodies observed within male nuclei of R. acetosa were globally enriched with H3 histone, demethylated at lysine 4 and methylated at lysine 9. This is the first report of histone tail-modification in condensed sex chromatin in plants. Our results suggest that the interphase condensation of Y chromosomes in Rumex is facultative rather than constitutive. Furthermore, the observed response of Y-bodies to 5-azaC may result indirectly from demethylation and the subsequent altered expression of unknown genes controlling tissue-specific Y-inactivation as opposed to the global demethylation of Y-chromosome DNA.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Plant/metabolism , Heterochromatin/metabolism , Rumex/cytology , Y Chromosome/metabolism , Azacitidine/pharmacology , Cell Culture Techniques , Cell Nucleus , Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly/drug effects , Chromosomes, Plant/drug effects , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Heterochromatin/drug effects , Heterochromatin/genetics , Histones/metabolism , Meristem/cytology , Methylation , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/drug effects , Rumex/genetics , Y Chromosome/drug effects , Y Chromosome/genetics
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