Chromosomal Evolution and Apomixis in the Cruciferous Tribe Boechereae

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Authors

MANDÁKOVÁ Terezie HLOUŠKOVÁ Petra WINDHAM M.D. MITCHELL-OLDS T. ASHBY K. PRICE B. CARMAN J. LYSÁK Martin

Year of publication 2020
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Frontiers in Plant Science
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Web https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2020.00514/full
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.00514
Keywords apomixis; apospory; autopolyploidy; Cruciferae; descending dysploidy; karyotype evolution; North America; speciation
Description The mustard family (Brassicaceae) comprises several dozen monophyletic clades usually ranked as tribes. The tribe Boechereae plays a prominent role in plant research due to the incidence of apomixis and its close relationship toArabidopsis. This tribe, largely confined to western North America, harbors nine genera and c. 130 species, with >90% of species belonging to the genusBoechera. Hundreds of apomictic diploid and triploidBoecherahybrids have spurred interest in this genus, but the remaining Boechereae genomes remain virtually unstudied. Here we report on comparative genome structure of six genera (Borodinia,Cusickiella,Phoenicaulis,Polyctenium,Nevada, andSandbergia) and threeBoecheraspecies as revealed by comparative chromosome painting (CCP). All analyzed taxa shared the same seven-chromosome genome structure. Comparisons with the sister Halimolobeae tribe (n= 8) showed that the ancestral Boechereae genome (n= 7) was derived from an oldern= 8 genome by descending dysploidy followed by the divergence of extant Boechereae taxa. As tribal divergence post-dated the origin of four tribe-specific chromosomes, it is proposed that these chromosomal rearrangements were a key evolutionary innovation underlaying the origin and diversification of the Boechereae in North America. Although most Boechereae genera exhibit genomic conservatism, intra-tribal cladogenesis has occasionally been accompanied by chromosomal rearrangements (particularly inversions). Recently, apomixis was reported in the Boechereae generaBorodiniaandPhoenicaulis. Here, we report sexual reproduction in diploidNevada, diploidSandbergia, and tetraploidCusickiellaand aposporous apomixis in tetraploids ofPolycteniumandSandbergia. In sum, apomixis is now known to occur in five of the nine Boechereae genera.
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