Evolution of Triticum aethiopicum Jakubz. from the Position of Chromosome Analysis


Citar

Texto integral

Acesso aberto Acesso aberto
Acesso é fechado Acesso está concedido
Acesso é fechado Somente assinantes

Resumo

Cytogenetic analysis was conducted on a set of 67 Ethiopian wheat accessions collected by the expedition of N.I. Vavilov in 1927 and 85 years later by the Joint Ethiopian–Russian Biological Expedition (JERBE) in 2012 in the same sites of Ethiopia. The preservation of the polymorphism system of heterochromatic chromosome sites upon the change in the Ethiopian wheat population structure over the past period owing to a frequency shift of some specific chromosome variants and an increase in the proportion of genotypes carrying marker rearrangements was demonstrated. The unevenness of the geographical distribution of the 2A:4B translocation and of the 5A inversion was identified, and it was demonstrated that wheat accessions from Eritrea were cytogenetically the most isolated from the population from the central regions of Ethiopia. A low level of the Ethiopian wheat polymorphism was found along with the prevalence of the same chromosome rearrangement variants, which was indicative of monophyletic origin of the species. It was suggested that Triticum aethiopicum could have diverged from Ethiopian emmer as a result of hybridization with other wheat species, while subsequent evolution of these species occurred independently. Evidence for the participation of Ethiopian wheat in the formation of the gene pool of the unique Moroccan group of T. dicoccum was obtained.

Sobre autores

E. Badaeva

Vavilov Institute of General Genetics; Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, Moscow, 117333; Moscow, 117334

A. Shishkina

Vavilov Institute of General Genetics

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, Moscow, 117333

N. Goncharov

Federal Research Center Institute of Cytology and Genetics, Siberian Branch

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, Novosibirsk, 630090

E. Zuev

Federal Research Center Vavilov All-Russian Institute of Plant Genetic Resources (VIR)

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 190000

N. Lysenko

Federal Research Center Vavilov All-Russian Institute of Plant Genetic Resources (VIR)

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 190000

O. Mitrofanova

Federal Research Center Vavilov All-Russian Institute of Plant Genetic Resources (VIR)

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 190000

A. Dragovich

Vavilov Institute of General Genetics

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, Moscow, 117333

A. Kudriavtsev

Vavilov Institute of General Genetics

Email: katerinabadaeva@gmail.com
Rússia, Moscow, 117333


Declaração de direitos autorais © Pleiades Publishing, Inc., 2018

Este site utiliza cookies

Ao continuar usando nosso site, você concorda com o procedimento de cookies que mantêm o site funcionando normalmente.

Informação sobre cookies