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Polyploidy and novelty: Gottlieb's legacy
Authors:Pamela S. Soltis  Xiaoxian Liu  D. Blaine Marchant  Clayton J. Visger  Douglas E. Soltis
Affiliation:1.Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA;2.Department of Biology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
Abstract:Nearly four decades ago, Roose & Gottlieb (Roose & Gottlieb 1976 Evolution30, 818–830. (doi:10.2307/2407821)) showed that the recently derived allotetraploids Tragopogon mirus and T. miscellus combined the allozyme profiles of their diploid parents (T. dubius and T. porrifolius, and T. dubius and T. pratensis, respectively). This classic paper addressed the link between genotype and biochemical phenotype and documented enzyme additivity in allopolyploids. Perhaps more important than their model of additivity, however, was their demonstration of novelty at the biochemical level. Enzyme multiplicity—the production of novel enzyme forms in the allopolyploids—can provide an extensive array of polymorphism for a polyploid individual and may explain, for example, the expanded ranges of polyploids relative to their diploid progenitors. In this paper, we extend the concept of evolutionary novelty in allopolyploids to a range of genetic and ecological features. We observe that the dynamic nature of polyploid genomes—with alterations in gene content, gene number, gene arrangement, gene expression and transposon activity—may generate sufficient novelty that every individual in a polyploid population or species may be unique. Whereas certain combinations of these features will undoubtedly be maladaptive, some unique combinations of newly generated variation may provide tremendous evolutionary potential and adaptive capabilities.
Keywords:polyploidy   novelty   Gottlieb
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