Cytological and molecular characterization of three gametoclones of Citrus clementina

Publication Overview
TitleCytological and molecular characterization of three gametoclones of Citrus clementina
AuthorsGermana MA, Aleza P, Carrera E, Chen C, Chiancone B, Costantino G, Dambier D, Deng X, Federici CT, Froelicher Y, Guo W, Ibáñez V, Juárez J, Kwok K, Luro F, Machado MA, Naranjo MA, Navarro L, Ollitrault P, Ríos G, Roose ML, Talon M, Xu Q, Gmitter FG
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC plant biology
Volume13
Year2013
Page(s)129
CitationGermana MA, Aleza P, Carrera E, Chen C, Chiancone B, Costantino G, Dambier D, Deng X, Federici CT, Froelicher Y, Guo W, Ibáñez V, Juárez J, Kwok K, Luro F, Machado MA, Naranjo MA, Navarro L, Ollitrault P, Ríos G, Roose ML, Talon M, Xu Q, Gmitter FG. Cytological and molecular characterization of three gametoclones of Citrus clementina. BMC plant biology. 2013; 13:129.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Three gametoclonal plants of Citrus clementina Hort. ex Tan., cv. Nules, designated ESP, FRA, and ITA (derived from three labs in Spain, France, and Italy, respectively), were selected for cytological and molecular characterization in order to elucidate genomic rearrangements provoked by haploidization. The study included comparisons of their ploidy, homozygosity, genome integrity, and gene dosage, using chromosome counting, flow cytometry, SSR marker genotyping, and array-Comparative Genomic Hybridization (array-CGH).

RESULTS
Chromosome counting and flow cytometry revealed that ESP and FRA were haploid, but ITA was tri-haploid. Homozygous patterns, represented by a single peak (allele), were observed among the three plants at almost all SSR loci distributed across the entire diploid donor genome. Those few loci with extra peaks visualized as output from automated sequencing runs, generally low or ambiguous, might result from amplicons of paralogous members at the locus, non-specific sites, or unexpected recombinant alleles. No new alleles were found, suggesting the genomes remained stable and intact during gametogenesis and regeneration. The integrity of the haploid genome also was supported by array-CGH studies, in which genomic profiles were comparable to the diploid control.

CONCLUSIONS
The presence of few gene hybridization abnormalities, corroborated by gene dosage measurements, were hypothetically due to the segregation of hemizygous alleles and minor genomic rearrangements occurring during the haploidization procedure. In conclusion, these plants that are valuable genetic and breeding materials contain completely homozygous and essentially intact genomes.

Features
This publication contains information about 8 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
C04035D02C04035D02genetic_marker
C06013D07C06013D07genetic_marker
C08012E04C08012E04genetic_marker
C34004E09C34004E09genetic_marker
IC0AAA34BC06IC0AAA34BC06genetic_marker
IC0AAA36DF07IC0AAA36DF07genetic_marker
IC0AAA56DH07IC0AAA56DH07genetic_marker
IC0AAA74CE10IC0AAA74CE10genetic_marker
Stocks
This publication contains information about 1 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
NulesNulesaccession
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelElectronic
ISSN1471-2229
eISSN1471-2229
Publication Date2013
Journal AbbreviationBMC Plant Biol.
DOI10.1186/1471-2229-13-129
Elocation10.1186/1471-2229-13-129
LanguageEnglish
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't