Interspecific and interploidal gene flow in Central European Arabidopsis (Brassicaceae)
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/3878DOI
doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-346Dato
2011Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Jørgensen, Marte Holten; Ehrich, Dorothee; Schmickl, Roswitha; Koch, Marcus A.; Brysting, Anne KragSammendrag
Effects of polyploidisation on gene flow between natural populations are little known. Central
European diploid and tetraploid populations of Arabidopsis arenosa and A. lyrata are here used to study interspecific and interploidal gene flow, using a combination of nuclear and plastid markers.
Ploidal levels were confirmed by flow cytometry. Network analyses clearly separated diploids according to species. Tetraploids and diploids were highly intermingled within species, and some tetraploids intermingled with the other species, as well. Isolation with migration analyses suggested interspecific introgression from tetraploid A. arenosa to tetraploid A. lyrata and vice versa, and some interploidal gene flow, which was unidirectional from diploid to tetraploid in A. arenosa and bidirectional in A. lyrata.
Interspecific genetic isolation at diploid level combined with introgression at tetraploid level
indicates that polyploidy may buffer against negative consequences of interspecific hybridisation. The role of introgression in polyploid systems may, however, differ between plant species, and even within the small genus
Arabidopsis, we find very different evolutionary fates when it comes to introgression.
Forlag
BioMed CentralSitering
BMC Evolutionary Biology 11(2011) nr. 346Metadata
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