AI Article Synopsis

  • Recombination is crucial for genetic diversity, and this study examines how the presence of C chromosomes affects crossover rates in Brassica napus hybrids.
  • It was found that increasing the number of C chromosomes in hybrids led to significantly higher homologous recombination rates, with certain configurations, specifically C6 and C9, showing the greatest increases.
  • The study reveals that different arrangements of chromosomes can influence genetic recombination, suggesting new strategies for enhancing genetic diversity in breeding programs.

Article Abstract

Recombination is a major mechanism generating genetic diversity, but the control of the crossover rate remains a key question. In Brassica napus (AACC, 2n = 38), we can increase the homologous recombination between A genomes in AAC hybrids. Hypotheses for this effect include the number of C univalent chromosomes, the ratio between univalents and bivalents and, finally, which of the chromosomes are univalents. To test these hypotheses, we produced AA hybrids with zero, one, three, six or nine additional C chromosomes and four different hybrids carrying 2n = 32 and 2n = 35 chromosomes. The genetic map lengths for each hybrid were established to compare their recombination rates. The rates were 1.4 and 2.7 times higher in the hybrids having C6 or C9 alone than in the control (0C). This enhancement reached 3.1 and 4.1 times in hybrids carrying six and nine C chromosomes, and it was also higher for each pair of hybrids carrying 2n = 32 or 2n = 35 chromosomes, with a dependence on which chromosomes remained as univalents. We have shown, for the first time, that the presence of one chromosome, C9 , affects significantly the recombination rate and reduces crossover interference. This result will have fundamental implications on the regulation of crossover frequency.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.12534DOI Listing

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