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Molecular cytogenetics (FISH, GISH) of Coccinia grandis: A ca. 3 myr-old species of Cucurbitaceae with the largest Y/autosome divergence in flowering plants
Authors
A. Sousa
Agarwal PK
+66 more
Ali HB
Armstrong SJ
Bachtrog D
Bergero R
Bergero R
Bhaduri P
Bombosch A
Borchert T
Błocka-Wandas M
Cermak T
Chakravorti AK
Charlesworth B
Chattopadhyay D
Chibalina MV
Costich DE
Cuñado N
Divashuk MG
Filatov DA
Galbraith DW
Grabowska-Joachimiak A
Grabowska-Joachimiak A
Greilhuber J
Guerra M
Guha A
Hizume M
Hobza R
Holstein N
Honys D
Huang S
Hughes JF
Ijdo JW
J. Fuchs
Jamilena M
Karlov GI
Kejnovsky E
Kumar LS
Kumar LS
Kurita M
Lan T
Lengerova M
Liu Z
Marais GA
Mariotti B
Mariotti B
Ming R
Moore RC
Navajas-Pérez R
Nicolas M
Rautenberg A
Renny-Byfield S
Roy RP
Ruiz Rejón C
S.S. Renner
Sakamoto K
Schaefer H
Schmidt T
Schwarzacher T
Shibata F
Shibata F
Siroky J
Skaletsky H
Spigler RB
Spigler RB
Uchida W
Yamato KT
Yu Q
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'S. Karger AG'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
The independent evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes in 19 species from 4 families of flowering plants permits studying X/Y divergence after the initial recombination suppression. Here, we document autosome/Y divergence in the tropical Cucurbitaceae Coccinia grandis, which is ca. 3 myr old. Karyotyping and C-value measurements show that the C. grandis Y chromosome has twice the size of any of the other chromosomes, with a male/female C-value difference of 0.094 pg or 10% of the total genome. FISH staining revealed 5S and 45S rDNA sites on autosomes but not on the Y chromosome, making it unlikely that rDNA contributed to the elongation of the Y chromosome; recent end-to-end fusion also seems unlikely given the lack of interstitial telomeric signals. GISH with different concentrations of female blocking DNA detected a possible pseudo-autosomal region on the Y chromosome, and C-banding suggests that the entire Y chromosome in C. grandis is heterochromatic. During meiosis, there is an end-to-end connection between the X and the Y chromosome, but the X does not otherwise differ from the remaining chromosomes. These findings and a review of plants with heteromorphic sex chromosomes reveal no relationship between species age and degree of sex chromosome dimorphism. Its relatively small genome size (0.943 pg/2C in males), large Y chromosome, and phylogenetic proximity to the fully sequenced Cucumis sativus make C. grandis a promising model to study sex chromosome evolution. Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Base
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Universität München: Elektronischen Publikationen
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Open Access LMU ( Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München)
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Last time updated on 09/07/2019
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1159%2F000345370
Last time updated on 03/01/2020
Open Access LMU ( Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München)
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Last time updated on 28/05/2014