BRIEF REPORT |
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization Analysis Reveals Multiple Loci of Knob-associated DNA Elements in One-knob and Knobless Maize Lines
Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin (SSMA,RMS,JJ), and Agriculture Genetic Engineering Research Institute, Agricultural Research Center, Giza 12619, Egypt (SSMA)
Correspondence to: Jiming Jiang, Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706. E-mail: jjiang1{at}wisc.edu
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Summary |
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Key Words: fluorescence in situ hybridization fiber-fluorescence in situ hybridization tandem repeat knob heterochromatin
KNOBS, first described by McClintock (1929) in maize, are heavily stained heterochromatic features that are often used as cytological landmarks in genetic and cytogenetic research. The discovery of the knob structures in maize spawned several decades of research focusing on these cytological features. Important biological and genetic characteristics, such as flowering time, recombination frequency, and meiotic drive, have been correlated with the presence of knob loci in maize (Rhoades 1978
; Buckler et al. 1999
). Several researchers have surveyed the distribution of knobs among different maize strains using cytological analysis of meiotic pachytene chromosomes (Brown 1949
; Ibrahim 1960
; McClintock et al. 1981
; Crughtai and Steffensen 1987
). Maize knobs have been found to be highly polymorphic in both size and number across different strains, including some maize strains in which knobs are absent, a condition termed "knobless."
Two families of tandemly repeated DNA sequences have been identified within the maize knobs. Peacock et al. (1981) showed that a 180-bp tandem repeat is the main component in maize knobs. Ananiev et al. (1998a)
more recently reported a 350-bp tandem repeat, TR-1, that is also associated with knobs. A correlation between the size of the knob and the copy number of the 180-bp repeat was previously demonstrated by radioactive DNA in situ hybridization (Dennis and Peacock 1984
), such that highly repetitive loci associate with large knobs and less repetitive loci associate with smaller knobs. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using the 180- and 350-bp repeats in two different maize lines has shown that these sequences may also be located in chromosomal regions without apparent knob formation (Ananiev et al. 1998a
; Chen et al. 2000
).
To further investigate the relationship between the locations of tandem repeats and knob formation, we conducted FISH analysis of the 180- and 350-bp repeats in six different maize accessions (Table 1). These accessions are inbred lines or varieties that were previously well characterized as either knobless or having one knob locus based on acetocarmine staining of meiotic pachytene chromosomes (Brown 1949; Crughtai and Steffensen 1987
). Therefore, if the 180- and 350-bp repeats are only located in chromosomal regions associated with knobs, we would expect that these two repeats hybridize to either zero or one locus on the metaphase chromosomes of these maize accessions.
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The single location of the 350-bp repeat was ideal for fiber-FISH analysis. We analyzed the 350-bp locus in C103 and Mo17, and the microscopic sizes of the fiber-FISH signals were converted into kilobases using a 3.21 kb/µm conversion rate (Cheng et al. 2002). The 350-bp repeat array was estimated to be 842 ± 191 kb in C103 based on measurements of 15 fibers and 1282 ± 136 kb in Mo17 based on 7 fibers. Figure 1G shows two Mo17 signals located in the same microscopic field. The FISH signals derived from both C103 and Mo17 DNA fibers were largely contiguous, but small gaps with consistent locations were observed along the fibers. This indicates that the 350-bp repeat arrays are interrupted by other DNA sequences, most likely invasion of retrotransposons (Ananiev et al. 1998b
).
In Wilbur's Flint, the 350-bp locus overlapped with weak FISH signals derived from the 180-bp repeat. Two-color fiber-FISH revealed short, interspersed 180-bp repeat signals within the 350-bp repeat arrays (Figure 1H). Interspersion of these two repeats was also reported in a 12-kb cosmid clone derived from maize chromosome 9 (Ananiev et al. 1998a). Short stretches of DNA sequences within the two repeats show some level of homology (Ananiev et al. 1998a
; Hsu et al. 2003
). It was suggested that the 350-bp repeat may have evolved from a 180-bp ancestral repeat (Ananiev et al. 1998a
; Hsu et al. 2003
). Interspersion of the fiber-FISH signals derived from these two repeats supports a common evolutionary origin for the two repeat families.
Previous studies showed that the 180- and 350-bp repeats are the main components of maize knobs (Peacock et al. 1981; Ananiev et al. 1998a
,b
). A correlation between knob size and the 180-bp repeat content has previously been documented using in situ hybridization (Dennis and Peacock 1984
). Chen et al. (2000)
observed that some maize 180-bp repeat loci do not associate with knob-like heterochromatin. We demonstrate that all four knobless maize accessions display multiple loci containing these two repeats, suggesting that these repeats do not necessarily confer the heterochromatic knob structure. In Mo17, the size of the FISH signals derived from the 350-bp repeat is significantly smaller than the major pair of FISH signals derived from the 180-bp repeat (Figure 1B). We assume that the single knob in this line is associated with the large 180-bp locus. Thus, the 350-bp array, which contains >1 Mb of DNA, is not associated with a distinct knob feature. These results suggest that the presence of high-copy 180- and 350-bp tandem repeats is not sufficient to induce a knob-like heterochromatic structure. The extreme condensation of knob heterochromatin may be conditioned by a combination of tandem repeats and other unknown factors.
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Footnotes |
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Literature Cited |
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