AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers observed that an extra circular chromosome (ECCAE) carries amplified genes related to glyphosate resistance in some plants, particularly in common waterhemp.
  • The ECCAE is heterochromatic, has four major amplification sites, and is transmitted to a significant proportion of progeny, showing a unique chromosomal structure and behavior under stress.
  • The study suggests that processes like breakage-fusion-bridge cycles in somatic cells result in diverse chromosomal variants, contributing to the evolution of herbicide resistance through new gene integrations.

Article Abstract

An increase in gene copy number is often associated with changes in the number and structure of chromosomes, as has been widely observed in yeast and eukaryotic tumors, yet little is known about stress-induced chromosomal changes in plants. Previously, we reported that the (5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase) gene, the molecular target of glyphosate, was amplified at the native locus and on an extra chromosome in glyphosate-resistant Here, we report that the extra chromosome is a ring chromosome termed extra circular chromosome carrying amplified (ECCAE). The ECCAE is heterochromatic, harbors four major amplified foci, and is sexually transmitted to 35% of the progeny. Two highly glyphosate resistant (HGR) plants with a chromosome constitution of 2n = 32+1 ECCAE displayed soma cell heterogeneity. Some cells had secondary ECCAEs, which displayed size polymorphisms and produced novel chromosomal variants with multiple gene amplification foci. We hypothesize that the ECCAE in the soma cells of HGR plants underwent breakage-fusion-bridge cycles to generate the observed soma cell heterogeneity, including de novo gene integration into chromosomes. Resistant soma cells with stable amplification events as de novo insertions into chromosomes may survive glyphosate selection pressure during the sporophytic phase and are plausibly transmitted to germ cells leading to durable glyphosate resistance in This is the first report of early events in aneuploidy-triggered de novo chromosome integration by an as yet unknown mechanism, which may drive rapid adaptive evolution of herbicide resistance in common waterhemp.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5841708PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.17.01668DOI Listing

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