Oryza officinalis (CC, 2
n=24) and
Oryza rhizomatis (CC, 2
n=24) belong to the
Oryza genus, which contains more than 20 identified wild rice species. Although much has been known about the molecular composition
and organization of centromeres in
Oryza sativa, relatively little is known of its wild relatives. In the present study, we isolated and characterized a 126-bp centromeric
satellite (CentO-C) from three bacterial artificial chromosomes of
O. officinalis. In addition to CentO-C, low abundance of CentO satellites is also present in
O. officinalis. In order to determine the chromosomal locations and distributions of CentO-C (126-bp), CentO (155 bp) and TrsC (366 bp)
satellite within
O. officinalis, fluorescence in situ hybridization examination was done on pachytene or metaphase I chromosomes. We found that only ten
centromeres (excluding centromere 7 and 2) contain CentO-C arrays in
O. officinalis, while centromere 7 comprises CentO satellites, and centromere 2 is devoid of any detectable satellites. For TrsC satellites,
it was detected at multiple subtelomeric regions in
O. officinalis, however, in
O. rhizomatis, TrsC sequences were detected both in the four centromeric regions (
CEN 3, 4, 10, 11) and the multiple subtelomeric regions. Therefore, these data reveal the evolutionary diversification pattern
of centromere DNA within/or between close related species, and could provide an insight into the dynamic evolutionary processes
of rice centromere.
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