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1.
Interrelationships between H. vulgare (2x=14) and H. bulbosum (2x=14; 4x=28) were estimated on the basis of the karyotypes and the pairing behaviour of the chromosomes in diploid, triploid and tetraploid hybrids obtained with the aid of embryo culture. — A comparison of the karyotypes of the two species revealed similarities as well as differences. It was concluded that at least 4 or more of the chromosomes were similar in morphology and probably closely related. — Diploid and tetraploid hybrids are rarely obtained and their chromosome numbers tend to be unstable whereas triploid hybrids (1 vulgare + 2 bulbosum genomes) were stable and relatively easy to produce. In the diploid hybrid only 40% of the meiotic cells contained 14 chromosomes while the numbers ranged from 7 to 16 in other cells. All hybrids exhibited pairing between the chromosomes of the two species. Diploid hybrids had a mean of 5.0 and a maximum of 7 bivalents per cell in those cells having 14 chromosomes. Triploid hybrids from crosses between 2x H. vulgare and 4x H. bulbosum exhibited a mean of 1.5 and a maximum of 5 trivalents per cell. In a hexaploid sector found following colchicine treatment of a triploid the mean frequencies of chromosome associations per cell were: 5.5I+8.0II+0.7III+3.7IV+0.3V+0.4VI. One unstable 27 chromosome hybrid obtained from crosses between the autotetraploid forms had a mean of 1.1 and a maximum of 4 quadrivalents per cell. The chromosome associations observed in these hybrids are consistent and are taken as evidence of homoeologous pairing between the chromosomes of the two species. Interspecific hybridization between these two species also reveals that chromosome stable hybrids are only obtained when the genomes are present in a ratio of 1 vulgare2 bulbosum. Based upon the results obtained, the possibility of transferring genetic characters from H. bulbosum into cultivated barley is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Ten kinds of interspecific hybrids were obtained involving the following species: H. surattensis L. (2x, genome constitution BB), H. sudanensis Hochr. (2x, GG), and H. rostellatus Guill. and Perr. (4x, GGHH) from Africa; H. furcatus Roxb. non Willd. (8x) from India and Ceylon; H. furcellatus Lam. and H. bifurcatus Cav. (both 4x, PPQQ) from South America; and H. heterophyllus Vent. (6x) from Australia. Chromosome pairing in pollen mother cells (PMC's) at metaphase I in the 4x hybrids H. bifurcatus-rostellatus and H. furcellatus-rostellatus indicated that the parents have one genome in common (Q = G or H). Hibiscus furcatus was shown earlier to have a B genome; hybrids of H. surattensis-sudanensis F1 X furcatus were hexaploid, having received an unreduced gamete from their hybrid parent, and had approximately 36 II, 36 I in PMC's. The genome formula of H. furcatus may therefore be designated BBGGWWZZ. The hybrid H. rostellatus-furcatus (BGGHWZ) confirmed that H. furcatus has a G genome in common with H. rostellatus; pairing of the other three genomes was inconsistent, as was that in H. rostellatus-heterophyllus. Some samples of the latter approached 36 II, 36 I, expected if H. heterophyllus were GGHHJJ; other samples had less pairing. Hibiscus furcatus-heterophyllus hybrids apparently arose from unreduced gametes of H. heterophyllus and originated as decaploids rather than heptaploids; chromosome number was unstable in PMC's. Nevertheless, multivalents, especially trivalents, were frequent enough to suggest that H. furcatus and H. heterophyllus share G genomes. On the other hand, an 8x H. bifurcatus-furcatus hybrid, which apparently arose from an unreduced gamete of H. bifurcatus, had a low multivalent frequency. Hybrids were obtained of H. heterophyllus X sudanensis and H. surattensis-sudanensis X heterophyllus, but the plants were weak and were not analyzed cytologically. We suggest that the New World, African, Indian, and Australian genomes which retain a considerable degree of homology (G or H or both) were distributed by land prior to separation of the southern continents by continental drift.  相似文献   

3.
J Sybenga 《Génome》1996,39(6):1176-1184
When polyploid hybrids with closely related genomes are propagated by selfing or sib-breeding, the meiotic behaviour will turn into essentially autopolyploid behaviour as soon as the affinity between the genomes is sufficient to permit occasional homoeologous pairing. An allopolyploid will only be formed when the initial differentiation is sufficient to completely prevent homoeologous pairing (in some cases enhanced by specific genes), or when segregational dysgenesis prevents transmission of recombined chromosomes. A new polyploid hybrid may be considered a segmental allopolyploid and may show reduced multivalent formation as a result of preferential pairing between the least differentiated genomes. An established polyploid is either an autopolyploid or an allopolyploid. In exceptional cases it is thinkable that a stable segmental allopolyploid arises, in which some sets of chromosomes are well differentiated and behave as in an allopolyploid, whereas other sets are not well differentiated and behave as in an autopolyploid. No clear cases have been found in the literature so far. Key words : chromosome, pairing affinity, quadrivalent frequency, segmental allopolyploidy.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Tetraploid F1 hybrids between Ipomoea batatas, sweet potato (2n = 6x = ca. 90), and diploid (2n = 2x = 30) I. trifida (H. B. K.) Don. showed various degrees of fertility reduction. The present study aimed to clarify its causes by cytological analysis of meiotic chromosome behavior in the diploid and sweet potato parents and their tetraploid hybrids. The diploid parents showed exclusively 15 bivalents, and the sweet potato parents exhibited almost perfect chromosome pairing along with predominant multivalent formation. Their hybrids (2n = 4x= 57–63) formed 2.6–5.0 quadrivalents per cell, supporting the autotetraploid nature. The meiotic aberratios of the hybrids were characterized by the formation of univalents, micronuclei, and abnormal sporads (monad, dyad, triad, and polyad). The causes underlying these aberrations were attributed in part to the multivalent formation, and in part to a disturbance in the spindle function. Three hybrids showing serious meiotic aberrations were very low in fertility. The utilization of the sweet potato-diploid I. trifida hybrids for sweet potato improvement is described and, further, the role of interploidy hybridization in the study of the sweet potato evolution is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Hordeum vulgare L. (2n=2x=14) was hybridized with Elymus patagonicus Speg. (2n=6x=42). The hybrid had 28 chromosomes, genomically represented as HSH1H2, and was perennial with a codominant phenotype. The chromosomes were meiotically associated as 19.6 univalents + 0.004 ring bivalents + 2.6 rod bivalents + 0.8 trivalents + 0.14 quadrivalents in 1,129 meiocytes, with a chiasma frequency of 4.77 per cell. The bivalent pairing presumably is an autosyndetic but modified expression of the H1H2 genomes of E. patagonicus, since ring bivalents were rare. This does not preclude the association of the H. vulgare H genome chromosomes with either H1 and/or H2 genomes of E. patagonicus to form bivalent or multivalent associations. A further evaluation of the genome homologies of H. vulgare, H. bogdanii, E. canadensis and E. patagonicus is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
Summary An aneupolyhaploid (2n = 36) of the decaploid Thinopyrum ponticum and an amphidiploid (2n = 28) of Hordeum violaceum x Hordeum bogdanii were produced through anther and inflorescence culture, respectively. Meiotic associations in pollen mother cells at metaphase I of these plants were analyzed. The aneupolyhaploid arose by direct embryogenesis from a microspore without passing through a callus phase. The mean pairing frequencies of 2.67 univalents + 0.54 rod bivalents + 8.85 ring bivalents + 2.75 trivalents + 0.17 chain quadrivalents + 0.56 ring quadrivalents + 0.65 pentavalents in the aneupolyhaploid (2n = 36) best fit the 221 model. However, the frequent multivalents (up to five trivalents, or three quadrivalents, or four pentavalents in a cell) indicated that decaploid T. ponticum has five sets of closely related genomes representable by the genome formula J1 J1 J1 J2 J2. Colchicine treatment of inflorescence-derived H. violaceum x H. bogdanii regenerants greatly enhanced the rate of chromosome doubling, and completely doubled regenerants could be isolated. The H. violaceum x H. bogdanii amphidiploid had a mean pairing pattern of 12.53 univalents + 5.57 rod bivalents + 1.97 ring bivalents + 0.07 trivalents + 0.03 hexavalents, indicating the presence of desynaptic gene(s) in the original diploiid hybrid. Therefore, the pairing frequency in that diploid hybrid was an under-estimate of chromosome homology between the parental genomes, and additional diploid hybrids are needed to assess the genome homology between H. violaceum and H. bogdanii. These two contrasting experiments demonstrated that tissue culture techniques are useful in altering the ploidy level to produce plant materials suitable for genome analysis and phylogenetic studies.Cooperative investigation of the USDA-ARS, Forage and Range Research Laboratory, Logan, UT 84322-6300, and the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322-4810. Approved as journal paper No. 3991  相似文献   

7.
The hypothesis that North American octoploid Agropyron smithii Rydb., 2n = 56, originated by hybridization between tetraploid Agropyron and Elymus species, followed by chromosome doubling, was tested by observing chromosome pairing in hybrids of A. smithii with an induced amphiploid, 2n = 56, derived from E. canadensis L., 2n = 28, X E. dasystachys Trin., 2n = 28, F1's. Chromosome pairing in A. smithii averaged 0.52I, 27.70II, 0.01III, and 0.01IV in 184 metaphase-I cells; and the amphiploid averaged 1.13I and 27.44II in 195 cells. Chromosome pairing in A. smithii X amphiploid hybrids averaged 8.20I, 23.38II, 0.34III, and 0.05IV in 101 metaphase-I cells. It was concluded that A. smithii was genomically similar to the E. canadensis-E. dasystachys amphiploid. The basic genome formula of the amphiploid is SSHHJJXX, with the SSHH genomes coming from E. canadensis and the JJXX genomes coming from E. dasystachys. Consideration of the morphological, ecological, and reproductive characteristics of all North American species that contain the basic SSHH and JJXX genomes led to the conclusion that A. dasystachyum (Hook.) Scribn., SSHH, and E. triticoides Buckl., JJXX, are the probable progenitors of A. smithii.  相似文献   

8.
Spontaneous hybridization between a male-sterile oilseed rape and two weeds   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Spontaneous interspecific hybrids were produced under natural conditions (pollination by wind and bees) between a male-sterile cybrid Brassica napus (AACC, 2n = 38) and two weeds Brassica adpressa (AdAd, 2n = 14) and Raphanus raphanistrum (RrRr, 2n = 18). After characterization by chromosome counts and isozyme analyses, we observed 512 and 3 734 inter-specific seeds per m2 for the B. napus-B. adpressa and B. napus-R. raphanistrum trials respectively. Most of the hybrids studied had the expected triploid structure (ACX). In order to quantify the frequency of allosyndesis between the genomes involved in the hybrids, their meiotic behavior was compared to a haploid of B. napus (AC). For the B. napus-B. adpressa hybrids, we concluded that probably no allosyndesis occurred between the two parental genomes, and that genetic factors regulating homoeologous chromosome pairing were carried by the B. adpressa genome. For the B. napus-R. raphanistrum hybrids, high chromosome pairing and the presence of multivalents (in 9.16% of the pollen mother cells) indicate that recombination is possible between chromosomes of different genomes. Pollen fertility of the hybrids ranged from 0 to 30%. Blackleg inoculation tests were performed on the three parental species and on the interspecific hybrids. BC1 production with the weeds and with rapeseed was attempted. Results are discussed in regard to the risk assessment of transgenic rapeseed cultivation, F1 hybrid rapeseed variety production, and rapeseed improvement.  相似文献   

9.
Wild grasses in the tribe Triticeae, some in the primary or secondary gene pool of wheat, are excellent reservoirs of genes for superior agronomic traits, including resistance to various diseases. Thus, the diploid wheatgrasses Thinopyrum bessarabicum (Savul. and Rayss) A. Love (2n = 2x = 14; JJ genome) and Lophopyrum elongatum (Host) A. Love (2n = 2x = 14; EE genome) are important sources of genes for disease resistance, e.g., Fusarium head blight resistance that may be transferred to wheat. By crossing fertile amphidiploids (2n = 4x = 28; JJEE) developed from F1 hybrids of the 2 diploid species with appropriate genetic stocks of durum wheat, we synthesized trigeneric hybrids (2n = 4x = 28; ABJE) incorporating both the J and E genomes of the grass species with the durum genomes A and B. Trigeneric hybrids with and without the homoeologous-pairing suppressor gene, Ph1, were produced. In the absence of Ph1, the chances of genetic recombination between chromosomes of the 2 useful grass genomes (JE) and those of the durum genomes (AB) would be enhanced. Meiotic chromosome pairing was studied using both conventional staining and fluorescent genomic in situ hybridization (fl-GISH). As expected, the Ph1-intergeneric hybrids showed low chromosome pairing (23.86% of the complement), whereas the trigenerics with ph1b (49.49%) and those with their chromosome 5B replaced by 5D (49.09%) showed much higher pairing. The absence of Ph1 allowed pairing and, hence, genetic recombination between homoeologous chromosomes. Fl-GISH analysis afforded an excellent tool for studying the specificity of chromosome pairing: wheat with grass, wheat with wheat, or grass with grass. In the trigeneric hybrids that lacked chromosome 5B, and hence lacked the Ph1 gene, the wheat-grass pairing was elevated, i.e., 2.6 chiasmata per cell, a welcome feature from the breeding standpoint. Using Langdon 5D(5B) disomic substitution for making trigeneric hybrids should promote homoeologous pairing between durum and grass chromosomes and hence accelerate alien gene transfer into the durum genomes.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Interspecific F1 hybrids of Nicotiana debneyi Domin (2n=48) and N. umbratica Burbidge (2n=46), both belonging to the section Suaveolentes, showed a high degree of meiotic chromosome pairing. Two of the five F2 plants obtained exhibited chromosome mosaicism. The first colchiploid generation (C1) had the expected chromosome number of 2n=94 while C2 showed 2n=88, a loss of three pairs of chromosomes. This same chromosome number continued in further colchiploid generations, followed up to C5, except for a few plants in C3 which showed chromosome mosaicism. The F1 phenotype was stable through C1 to C5 and fertility was normal in colchiploids through all generations in spite of the loss of three pairs of chromosomes and chromosome mosaicism. This stability and fertility apparently reflect the tolerance of the genomes to the genetic adjustment of chromosome complements which is believed to be associated with the originally polyploid nature of the parental species and the chromosome doubling brought about in the amphidiploids.  相似文献   

11.
Chromosome pairing was examined at Metaphase 1 in F1 hybrids between Hibiscus surattensis L. (B genome) and three other diploid species, H. hiernianus Exell, H. mastersianus Hiern, and H. mechowii Garcke. The low level of chromosome association in all three types of hybrids indicated that the pollen parent of each hybrid contributed a genome that was meiotically nonhomologous with B. Earlier studies had shown that H. mastersianus and H. hiernianus have similar genomes that are nonhomologous with the genome of H. mechowii. Thus, these four African diploids with overlapping ranges encompass three different genome groups. Provisional genome designations were assigned as follows: H. hiernianus, Xhie; H. mastersianus, Xmas; H. mechowii, Ymec.  相似文献   

12.
Metaphase-I chromosome association in PMCs of five F1 hybrids 6x-triticale x T. turgidum (2n=5x=35 and genomes AABBR), and 13 plants from their backross or self offspring is reported. In wheat 18 chromosome arms and in rye 14 arms were recognized after C-banding and individually studied. Plants of backcross and F2 showed variability for number and type of rye chromosomes, having in common the 28 durum wheat chromosomes (AABB). By testing meiotic association in plants with different rye chromosome constitutions, significant negative correlations were found. A clear negative effect of rye heterochromatin on pairing in wheat chromosomes is observed, the influence being more pronounced for large arms than for the short ones.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Two hybrid embryos of intergeneric origin between Triticum aestivum cv Fukuho (2n=6x=42, AABBDD) and Psathyrostachys juncea (2n=2x=14, NN) were successfully rescued. One hybrid plant had the expected chromosome number of 28 (ABDN), whereas the second plant had 35 chromosomes. The average meiotic chromosome pairing in the 35-chromosome hybrid was 21.87 univalents + 6.38 bivalents + 0.11 trivalents + 0.009 quadrivalents, which indicates that two copies of the N genome were present. Chromosome pairing in the 28-chromosome hybrid was low (1.35 bivalents), and pointed out the lack of homology between the wheat genomes and the P. juncea genome. These new hybrids showed some necrosis and chlorosis, which caused severe floral abortion in the plant that had 35 chromosomes. These problems became gradually less severe after 18 months.Contrib. no. 372  相似文献   

14.
Summary In an attempt to transfer genes for salt tolerance and other desirable traits from the diploid wheatgrasses, Thinopyrum bessarabicum (2n=2x=14; JJ genome) and Lophopyrum elongatum (2n=2x=14; EE genome), into durum wheat cv Langdon (2n=4x=28; AABB genomes), trigeneric hybrids with the genomic constitution ABJE were synthesized and cytologically characterized. C-banding analysis of somatic chromosomes of the A, B, J, and E genomes in the same cellular environment revealed distinct banding patterns; each of the 28 chromosomes could be identified. They differed in the total amount of constitutive heterochromatin. Total surface area and C-banded area of each chromosome were calculated. The B genome was the largest in size, followed by the J, A, and E genomes, and its chromosomes were also the most heavily banded. Only 25.8% of the total chromosome complement in 10 ABJE hybrids showed association, with mean arm-pairing frequency (c) values from 0.123 to 0.180 and chiasma frequencies from 3.36 to 5.02 per cell. The overall mean pairing was 0.004 ring IV + 0.046 chain IV + 0.236 III + 0.21 ring II + 2.95 rod II + 20.771. This is total pairing between chromosomes of different genomes, possibly between A and B, A and J, A and E, B and J, B and E, and J and E, in the presence of apparently functional pairing regulator Ph1. Because chromosome pairing in the presence of Ph1 seldom occurs between A and B, or between J and E, it was inferred that pairing between the wheat chromosomes and alien chromosomes occurred. The trigeneric hybrids with two genomes of wheat and one each of Thinopyrum and Lophopyrum should be useful in the production of cytogenetic stocks to facilitate the transfer of alien genes into wheat.  相似文献   

15.
The A genome of the tetraploid wheats (AABB, 2n = 28) shows 5-6 bivalents in crosses with Triticum boeoticum (2n = 14) and various Aegilops diploids (2n = 14). The B genome has never been similarly identified with any species, and is commonly thought to have been modified at the tetraploid level. Triticum boeoticum was presumably accepted as the A-genome donor because of its morphological similarity to the wild tetraploids and because it was formerly the only known wild diploid wheat. The B donor has been thought to be Ae. speltoides or another species of the Sitopsis section of Aegilops, but these diploids show pairing affinity with A rather than B. More recently, another diploid wheat, T. urartu, was found to be sympatric with T. boeoticum throughout the natural range of the tetraploids. The synthetic boeoticum-urartu amphiploid was virtually identical morphologically with the wild tetraploid wheats, whereas various boeoticum-Sitopsis amphiploids were markedly different. But the urartu genome, like those of T. boeoticum and Sitopsis, paired with A and not with B. However, cytological evidence also shows (1) that the genomes of any plausible parental combination pair with one another, (2) that the A and B genomes of the tetraploid wheats pair with one another in the absence of the gene Ph, and (3) that homoeologous chromosomes of the tetraploids have differentiated further, presumably as a result of diploidization. Consequently, chromosome pairing at Meiosis I can be expected to give ambiguous evidence regarding the identity of the tetraploid genomes with their parental prototypes. A hypothesis regarding the expected pairing affinities between tetraploid homoeologues that have differentiated from closely related parental chromosomes is advanced to explain the anomalous pairing behavior of the A and B genomes. Triticum boeoticum and T. urartu are inferred to be the parents of the tetraploid wheats.  相似文献   

16.
The sagebrushes (subgenus Tridentatae of Artemisia—new combination presented in the text) are western North America's most widespread and populous shrub group. Chromosome counts from 120 populations confirm the base chromosome number at x = 9 with numerous 2n = 2x = 18 diploids and 2n = 4x = 36 tetraploids. Few higher polyploids are known, and aneuploidy and supernumerary chromosomes are rare. All 11 Tridentatae species are now known cytologically. All but the narrowly endemic A. argillosa are known from at least three locations: A. arbuscula (2n = 18, 36), A. bigelovii (2n = 18, 36), A. cana (2n = 18, 36), A. longiloba (2n = 18, 36), A. nova (2n = 18, 36), A. pygmaea (2n = 18, 36), A. rigida (2n = 18, 36), A. rothrockii (2n = 18, 36, 54, ca. 72), A. tridentata (2n = 18, 36, 54), and A. tripartita (2n = 18, 36). The chromosome number of A. argillosa, reported here for the first time, is 2n = 36. Chromosome numbers of eight subspecies also have been determined. The subgenus is characterized by autopolyploidy as indicated by morphologically indistinguishable 2x and 4x plants, a few mixed ploidy populations, consistent formation of IVs in 4x PMCs, a relatively uniform 2x karyotype, and a 4x karyotype, which is approximately twice the 2x one. Karyotypic differences, if they exist at all, are on a populational level rather than a systematic taxonomic level. The Tridentatae have apparently rapidly differentiated in situ in North America under the stimulus of recurring aridic cycles since late Tertiary or early Quaternary. They likely derive from more primitive circumboreal stock originating from the Eurasian homeland of Artemisia. The differentiation of myriad forms of Tridentatae was seemingly achieved through genic rather than genomic means. Karyotypic analysis supports a position within Tridentatae of A. rigida, A. bigelovii, and A. pygmaea.  相似文献   

17.
Menzel , Margaret Y. (Florida State U., Tallahassee), and James B. Pate . Chromosomes and crossing behavior of some species of Sansevieria. Amer. Jour. Bot. 47(3) : 230—238. Illus. 1960.–Approximately 20 species (28 clones) studied were diploids, tetraploids or hexaploids of the basic numbers x = 20; about 40% of the taxa were polyploid. All species had similar karyotypes, except for chromosome number. Five of 12 combinations of diploid species gave fertile F1 hybrids; 4 studied cytologically showed 20 bivalents at metaphase I. Two triploid interspecific hybrids showed high trivalent frequencies. In contrast, multivalent formation in polyploid species was variable but rather low. Morphological relationships appeared reticulate among and between diploids and polyploids and did not coincide with barriers to crossing or to hybrid fertility. The following tentative hypothesis concerning relationships in the genus is proposed: Sansevieria is monophyletic and speciation has proceeded through genetic variation and hybridization at the diploid level and by allopolyploidy (of the segmental type) ; a low level of chromosome differentiation has accompanied speciation such that complete pairing occurs in diploid hybrids, but considerable preferential pairing occurs in allopolyploids. The occurrence of both polyploid and hybrid vigor, the fertility of hybrids between species differing greatly in morphology and physiology, and the high potential for vegetative propagation make the genus a favorable subject for breeding based on interspecific hybridization.  相似文献   

18.
The genus Glycine is composed of two subgenera, Glycine and Soja. Soja includes the cultivated soybean, G. max, and its wild annual counterpart G. soja, while Glycine includes seven wild perennial species. Hybridization was carried out within and between wild perennial species of the subgenus Glycine. The success rate (pods set/flowers crossed) was 11% for intraspecific and 8% for interspecific crosses. A total of 220 F1 hybrids was examined morphologically and cytologically where possible. Hybrids within G. canescens (2n = 40) and G. latifolia (2n = 40) were fertile as expected. Glycine clandestina (2n = 40) was morphologically separable into at least three groups, which produced fertile hybrids within each group. One cross between two groups gave vegetatively vigorous but sterile hybrids. The majority of crosses within G. tabacina (2n = 80) were fertile, except that extremely narrow-leaved forms gave sterile hybrids in combination with more usual forms. Sterility was also encountered in G. tomentella when aneuploids (2n = 78) from New South Wales, Australia, were crossed with tetraploids (2n = 80) from either Queensland, Australia, or Taiwan; crosses between the latter two populations resulted in seedling lethality. Cytological behavior of sterile hybrids followed a similar pattern, whether at the diploid or tetraploid level. The frequency of chromosome pairing was approximately half that expected if genomes showed full pairing homology. Bivalent disjunction at anaphase I was usually followed by precocious division of the majority of univalents. Telophase I and II were characterized by lagging chromosomes and micronuclei, so that resulting pollen was misshapen and sterile. Chromosome pairing data from sterile intraspecific hybrids at the tetraploid level may indicate a polyphyletic origin of tetraploids, whereby different diploid populations were involved in their formation. Similarly, chromosome pairing in sterile intraspecific diploid hybrids may indicate that the various diploid groups arose independently of one another. Both 40- and 80-chromosome forms are fully diploidized, however, and if they are of ancient origin, divergence since that time could have resulted in the chromosomal differentiation which becomes apparent when intraspecific hybridization is effected. Diploid (2n = 40) interspecific hybrids G. falcata × G. canescens, and G. falcata × G. tomentella grew poorly and did not reach flowering stage. Diploid (2n = 40) crosses between G. latifolia and G. tomentella produced inviable seedlings. Tetraploid (2n = 80) hybrids between G. tomentella and G. tabacina were vegetatively vigorous but sterile owing to low chromosome pairing at meiosis, indicating little pairing homology between the two species. Diploid hybrids between G. canescens and G. clandestina, however, showed almost complete chromosome pairing at diakinesis and partial fertility. Although morphologically distinct, these two species have not diverged sufficiently to prevent hybridization and possible gene exchange through recombination. Self compatibility, perennial growth habit, and geographic isolation have favored divergence among Glycine populations to the point that gene exchange appears no longer possible in many cases. Internal isolating mechanisms have been shown to operate at various levels of plant development from hybrid lethality at seedling stage, to failure of seed-set in sterile but vegetatively vigorous hybrids.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Hybridization frequency was investigated between tetraploid perennial and Italian ryegrass (Lolium perenne X multiflorum) without emasculation by using genetic markers. The Italian phenotypes, fluorescentroots and awned florets, were dominant. About 82% of the plants in perennial X Italian and nearly 93 % of the plants in the reciprocal crosses were hybrids. The hybrids had a high multivalent frequency and involved homoeologous chromosome pairing. Aneuploids with 2n = 26, 27 and 29 chromosomes were present. The hybrids were highly fertile. The cytogenetic behaviour of these allopolyploids suggested that the genomes of the parental species have undergone little repatterning and have free genetic exchanges. The species maintained their self-incompatibility and cross-compatibility at the tetraploid level.  相似文献   

20.
Dewey, Douglas R. (Utah State U., Logan.) Morphology and (cytology of synthetic hybrids of Agropyron trichophorum X Agropyron cristatum. Amer. Jour. Bot. 50(10): 1028–1034. Illus 1963.—Three hybrids were obtained from controlled crosses of pubescent wheatgrass, A. trichophorum (2n = 42), and hexaploid crested wheatgrass, A. cristatum (211 = 42). The hybrids were intermediate between the parent plants for all vegetative and spike characteristics observed. Under open pollination, 2 of the hybrids set 2 seeds each, and the other hybrid produced 60 seeds. Meiosis in the parent plants was basically regular. Average motaphase-I chromosome associations were 0.09 I, 20.56 II, 0.05 III, and 0.16 IV per cell in the A. trichophorum parent, which was described as a segmental autoallohexaploid. The hexaploid A. cristatum parent averaged 0.18 I, 7.44 II, 0.81 III, 2.86 IV, 0.08 V, and 2.11 VI per cell at diakinesis and was described as an autohexaploid. Chromosome pairing in the hexaploid hybrid averaged 5.08 I, 8.94 II, 4.33 III, 1.11 IV, 0.27 V, and 0.05 VI per cell. On the basis of chromosome pairing in the parent species and their hybrids, it was concluded that 1 of the A. trichophorum genomes was partially homologous with the 3 genomes of hexaploid A. cristatum. Genome formulae for hexaploid A. cristatum, A. trichophorum, and their hybrids were represented as AAAAAA, A1A1B1B1B2B2, and AAAA1B1B2 respectively.  相似文献   

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