Correspondence to: Graham Moore, John Innes Centre, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK. Tel:44-1603-452571 Fax:44-1603-502241 E-mail:tracie.foote{at}bbsrc.ac.uk.
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Abstract |
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Many species exhibit polyploidy. The presence of more than one diploid set of similar chromosomes in polyploids can affect the assortment of homologous chromosomes, resulting in unbalanced gametes. Therefore, a mechanism is required to ensure the correct assortment and segregation of chromosomes for gamete formation. Ploidy has been shown to affect gene expression. We present in this study an example of a major effect on a phenotype induced by ploidy within the Triticeae. We demonstrate that centromeres associate early during anther development in polyploid species. In contrast, centromeres in diploid species only associate at the onset of meiotic prophase. We propose that this mechanism provides a potential route by which chromosomes can start to be sorted before meiosis in polyploids. This explains previous reports indicating that meiotic prophase is shorter in polyploids than in their diploid progenitors. Even artificial polyploids exhibit this phenotype, suggesting that the mechanism must be present in diploids, but only expressed in the presence of more than one diploid set of chromosomes.
Key Words: meiosis, pairing, floral development, telomere, nuclear organization
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Introduction |
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Polyploidy is a very wide spread phenomenon in eukaryotes, and may be a fundamental evolutionary mechanism. Known polyploid species include up to 70% of flowering plants (
Polyploidy can arise either by multiplication of a basic set of chromosomes (autopolyploidy) or as a result of combining related, but not completely homologous genomes (allopolyploidy). Polyploids arise constantly in nature; however, the presence of additional sets of chromosomes possessing a similar structure can create a disruption of chromosome pairing during meiosis. This results in the production of unbalanced gametes, which leads to infertility. To produce viable gametes, polyploids must behave effectively as diploids during meiosis, only true homologous chromosomes pairing. Surprisingly, it has been shown that meiosis is shorter in polyploid plants than in their diploid progenitors (
A great number of plant species have evolved by means of polyploidization. Among the cereals, the Triticeae tribe comprises many polyploid species as well as their diploid progenitors. We have taken advantage of the fact that not only the genome relation and composition of the Triticeae polyploids is known (
We have studied centromere and telomere behavior during anther development in related species with different ploidy levels from the Triticeae tribe. Thick anther sections were labeled with centromere and telomere probes by in situ hybridization, and visualized by three-dimensional confocal microscopy. We demonstrate that centromeres associate as pairs early during floral development in all the polyploid species studied, but in diploids, there is an association of centromeres only in the pollen mother cells (PMCs)1 at meiosis.
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Materials and Methods |
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Species
All plants used in this study came from the John Innes Centre seed collection. The species used were the following (the John Innes Centre seed collection accession number is given in parenthesis): Triticum monococcum (1040005), Aegilops squarrosa (2220007), Aegilops speltoides (2140008), Aegilops bicornis (2190001), induced autotetraploid Aegilops bicornis (2200001), Triticum durum (1180351), artificial AADD allotetraploid (Triticum aegilopoides x Aegilops squarrosa, 7010071), Aegilops cylindrica (2100001), Triticum aestivum (1190830), and Aegilops vavilovi (2260001). Ploidy and genome composition of each species is given in Table 1.
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Anther Sections
All spikes were harvested between late April and early September. Spikes at different developmental stages were fixed for 12 h in 4% formaldehyde in PEM (50 mM Pipes, 5 mM EGTA, 5 mM MgSO4, pH 6.9). Single spikelets were detached from the spike and sectioned (50100-µm-thick sections) under water using a Vibratome Series 1000 (TAAB Laboratories Equipment Ltd.). Spikelet sections were placed on multiwell slides (ICN Biomedicals Inc.) coated with 2% (vol/vol) -aminopropyl triethoxy silane (APTES; Sigma Chemical Co.) and dried overnight at 37°C.
Seeds were germinated and grown for 34 d before the root tips were excised, and then fixed in 4% formaldehyde in PEM. The sectioning was carried out in the same way as the anthers.
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization
Spikelet sections on multiwell slides were dehydrated and rehydrated in a methanol series (30, 50, 70, 100, 70, 50, and 30%) for 5 min each. Sections were treated with 2% (wt/vol) cellulase at 37°C for 1 h. The sections were dehydrated in a series of steps in 70, 90, and 100% ethanol, and air dried. The hybridization mixes with the probes for centromere (CCS1) and telomere (TTTAGGG repeats) were prepared as described in
Probes were labeled with digoxigenin-11-dUTP (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.) and biotin-16-dUTP (Boehringer Mannheim). Probes were detected using FITC-conjugated sheep antidigoxigenin antibody (Boehringer Mannheim) and extravidin-Cy3 (Sigma Chemical Co.). Both antibodies were prepared in 4x SSC, 0.1% Tween 20, and 5% BSA. Antibody incubations were carried out for 1 h in a humid chamber at 37°C. After three washes with 4x SSC and 0.1% Tween 20, slides were counterstained with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; Sigma Chemical Co.), and then mounted in antifade solution (Vectashield; Vector Laboratories Inc.).
Microscopy and Imaging Processing
Confocal optical section stacks were collected using a Leica TCS SP confocal microscope (Leica Microsystems, Heidelberg GmbH) equipped with a krypton and an argon laser. All the DAPI confocal images were collected using a confocal microscope (model MRC-1000; Bio-Rad Laboratories) equipped with a UV laser. Low magnification DAPI images (see Figure 1, a, c, and e) were acquired using a series 300 CCD camera (Photometrics) attached to a Nikon microphot-SA. Images were processed on a Macintosh computer using Adobe Photoshop and printed on a Fuji Pictrography P3000 printer.
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Results |
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The floral anatomy of all the studied species is very similar. The flower contains three anthers, each one having four loculi (Figure 1 a). In the center of the loculi, the PMCs can be found surrounded by a layer of tapetal cells (Figure 1 b). A clear marker for the onset of meiosis is the presence of a telomere cluster in the PMCs (
Using three-dimensional confocal image stacks from anther sections labeled with the centromere and telomere probes, we counted the number of centromeres at different stages in species with different ploidy levels. These numbers are presented in Table 1. For each species, the number of centromeric sites is given at an early anther developmental stage (before PMCs and tapetal cells are morphologically differentiated) and at the beginning of the meiotic prophase as judged by clustered telomeres. All the diploid species (2n = 14) analyzed (T. monococcum, A. speltoides, A. bicornis, and A. squarrosa) at the early development stage displayed a number of centromeric sites very close to 14, indicating that the centromeres are unassociated at this stage (Figure 2 a). However, at the beginning of meiotic prophase, all the diploid species show close to 7 centromere sites, indicating that the centromeres are associated in pairs (Figure 2 b). In the case of all the polyploid species studied, the number of centromere sites during early anther development was reduced to a number close to half the number of chromosomes present, indicating that the centromeres are mostly associated in pairs. Tetraploid species (2n = 4x = 28) display a number of centromeric sites close to 14 (Figure 2 c), and hexaploid species (2n = 6x = 42) display a number of centromeric sites close to 21 (Figure 2 e). By the beginning of meiotic prophase, the number of centromeric sites is still close to half the number of the chromosomes present, indicating in both cases that the centromeres remain associated in pairs. Thus, for allotetraploids, 14 centromeric sites (T. durum and A. cylindrica) and, for allohexaploids, 21 centromeric sites (A. vavilovi and T. aestivum) are observed (Figure 2d and Figure f). However, the situation is different in the case of autotetraploids. The autotetraploid A. bicornis line was induced by colchicine treatment, and has been grown for ~10 generations. Although the autotetraploid displays close to 14 centromeric sites at early anther development, by the beginning of meiotic prophase, the number is reduced further to ~7 sites, suggesting that the centromeres are associated in groups of four (Table 1).
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In all the polyploid species studied, the centromeres associate at an early stage of anther development, and both PMCs and tapetal cells display associated centromeres (Figure 3 b). In diploids, centromeres associate only in the PMCs and not until the beginning of meiotic prophase, whereas tapetal cells at this stage still display unassociated centromeres (Figure 3 c). As a control for this study, in situ hybridization using the centromere probe was carried out on root tip sections. The centromeres were unassociated (Figure 3 a).
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An artificial allotetraploid containing the A and D genomes (Triticum aegilopoides x Aegilops squarrosa) was also analyzed. This line has not been reported to occur naturally, and has only been grown for six generations since it was created. The fertility of this line is low. As in the case of the other polyploids, the centromeres also associated during early anther development before the PMCs and the tapetal cells were morphologically distinct. However, the number and size of the centromeric sites was very irregular (Figure 4). The irregular associations were not corrected to pairs at the beginning of meiotic prophase (Figure 4c and Figure d). This contrasts with the regularity in size and number of the centromeric sites found in other polyploids studied (Figure 2, cf).
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Discussion |
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We have demonstrated that in a wide range of cereal species polyploidy results in the early association of centromeres during anther development, whereas in diploids centromeres only associate at the beginning of meiotic prophase. The large nuclei and centromeres in these species makes them more amenable to study than, for example, yeast. Although the cereal centromere sites are located at one pole, as in the yeast nucleus, they are visualized as individual structures rather than the single cluster of centromeres seen in yeast nuclei (
The early centromeric associations during anther development are mainly observed as pairs since the number of centromere signals is close to half the number of chromosomes present. The only exception was the artificial AD allotetraploid, in which we saw associations involving >2 centromeres. In polyploids, the association of centromeres is initiated before the differentiation of tapetal cells and PMCs; therefore, on differentiation, both cell types exhibit centromere association. Although the early association of the centromeres is only triggered when more than one complement of chromosomes is present, the potential for this somatic centromere association must be present in the diploid species since it is expressed during anther development in recently created polyploids (AD artificial allotetraploid line and the induced autotetraploid). Although it is possible, but unlikely, that the association mechanism could have evolved independently de novo for each of the naturally occurring polyploid species, it would be very difficult to explain its immediate expression in newly created polyploid lines. For example, the AD artificial line has only been grown for six generations, which is not enough time for such a mechanism to be generated.
There are two possibilities for this association mechanism: (1) either it is a purely somatic mechanism, which is not expressed in diploid species, but which is triggered during floral development in polyploids; or (2) it is the same mechanism that leads to homologous centromeres associating during meiosis, which is brought forward to start earlier during development in polyploids. Whichever of these two possibilities, we have to explain why the presence of more than one complement of chromosomes induces the phenotype. Possible explanations include gene dosage effects, homology-dependent cosuppression, or purely physical effects due to the consequences of changes in nuclear volume.
The autotetraploid line also showed association of centromeres in pairs during anther development. At the beginning of meiotic prophase, the number of centromere sites reduced to seven, suggesting that these signals must each be composed of four centromeres. This is consistent with previous studies reporting the formation of quadrivalents during meiotic prophase in autotetraploid cereals (
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The one exception to regular centromere pairing in the polyploids we have studied is the AD artificial allotetraploid. This line shows irregular multiple centromere associations rather than strict pairing. Thus, not all possible genome combinations can lead to regular centromere associations, and irregular association of centromeres may lead to low fertility (as in the AD line); this may have been a factor in determining which genome combinations have evolved naturally.
Control of centromere association operates at least at three different phenotypic levels: (1) association, (2) association as pairs, and (3) association as homologous pairs. In hexaploid wheat, the Ph1 locus promotes pairing between the homologous chromosomes. A single line carrying a deletion of this locus has been important for breeding purposes during the last 20 yr because wheat chromosomes are able either to pair with their homologous chromosomes or with chromosomes from related species. In wheat lacking the Ph1 locus, the centromeres associate as nonhomologous pairs during anther development, but the sorting to homologous associations before meiosis is disrupted (
By polyploidization, new species can be produced within just one generation. But for the new species to be established, they need to produce viable and balanced gametes. The early developmental association of centromeres may be important in achieving that goal. Many species are polyploid, particularly among plants but also in other kingdoms. It will now be interesting to determine whether a similar mechanism operates in other polyploids.
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Footnotes |
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1 Abbreviations used in this paper: DAPI, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole; PMCs, pollen mother cells.
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Acknowledgements |
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We thank Steve Reader and Dr. Terry Miller (John Innes Centre) for providing all the seeds used in this study.
This work was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Research Council of the United Kingdom, and the John Innes Foundation (to E. Martinez-Perez).
Submitted: 12 October 1999
Revised: 3 December 1999
Accepted: 8 December 1999
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References |
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