Differential transcript profiling alters regulatory gene expression during the development of Gossypium arboreum, G.stocksii and somatic hybrids

Abstract Polyploidy or genome doubling (i.e., the presence of two or more diploid parental genome sets within an organism) are very important in higher plants. Of particular interest are the mechanisms in the new microenvironment of the common nucleus, where doubled regulatory networks interact to g...

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Autores principales: Liping Ke, Binglun Luo, Liqing Zhang, Mengna Zhang, Xiushuang Yu, Jie Sun, Yuqiang Sun
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/760edfa59de344178ea21975f71ded07
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Sumario:Abstract Polyploidy or genome doubling (i.e., the presence of two or more diploid parental genome sets within an organism) are very important in higher plants. Of particular interest are the mechanisms in the new microenvironment of the common nucleus, where doubled regulatory networks interact to generate a viable genetic system capable of regulating growth, development and responses to the environment. To determine the effects of whole genome merging and doubling on the global gene expression architecture of a new polyploid, derived from protoplast fusion of the A1A1 genome of Gossypium arboreum and the E1E1 genome of Gossypium stocksii, we monitored gene expression through cDNA-AFLP in the somatic hybrids (G. arboreum + G. stocksii). The genomic expression patterns of the somatic hybrids revealed that changes in expression levels mainly involved regulatory genes (31.8% of the gene expression profiles), and the AA and EE genomes contributed equally to genome-wide expression in the newly formed AAEE genome from additivity and dominance effects. These results provide a novel perspective on polyploid gene regulation and hint at the underlying genetic basis of allopolyploid adaption in the new microenvironmental nucleus.