Login / Signup

Hybridization and polyploidization effects on LTR-retrotransposon activation in potato genome.

Magdalena GantuzAndrés MoralesMaría Victoria BertoldiVerónica Noé IbañezPaola Fernanda DuarteCarlos Federico MarfilRicardo Williams Masuelli
Published in: Journal of plant research (2021)
Hybridization and polyploidization are major forces in plant evolution and potatoes are not an exception. It is proposed that the proliferation of Long Terminal Repeat-retrotransposons (LTR-RT) is related to genome reorganization caused by hybridization and/or polyploidization. The main purpose of the present work was to evaluate the effect of interspecific hybridization and polyploidization on the activation of LTR-RT. We evaluated the proliferation of putative active LTR-RT in a diploid hybrid between the cultivated potato Solanum tuberosum and the wild diploid potato species S. kurtzianum, allotetraploid lines derived from this interspecific hybrid and S. kurtzianum autotetraploid lines (ktz-autotetraploid) using the S-SAP (sequence-specific amplified polymorphism) technique and normalized copy number determination by qPCR. Twenty-nine LTR-RT copies were activated in the hybrid and present in the allotetraploid lines. Major LTR-RT activity was detected in Copia-27, Copia-12, Copia-14 and, Gypsy-22. According to our results, LTR-RT copies were activated principally in the hybrid, there was no activation in allotetraploid lines and only one copy was activated in the autotetraploid.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • single molecule
  • mitochondrial dna
  • signaling pathway
  • nucleic acid
  • dna methylation
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • solid phase extraction
  • cell wall
  • simultaneous determination
  • plant growth