scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Martin A. Lysak published in 2003"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first report of successful interspecific chromosome painting in plants and considers technical aspects of the painting approach and document major applications, such as the tracing of Arabidopsis chromosomes as interphase chromosome territories and during mitotic and meiotic cell cycles as well as comparative chromosomes painting in related species.
Abstract: This paper reports on state-of-the-art achievements of chromosome painting in Arabidopsis thaliana (2n = 10). Arabidopsis chromosomes 1, 2 and 4 were painted using chromosome-specific BAC contigs. We consider technical aspects of the painting approach and document major applications, such as the tracing of Arabidopsis chromosomes as interphase chromosome territories and during mitotic and meiotic cell cycles as well as comparative chromosome painting in related species. This is the first report of successful interspecific chromosome painting in plants. The evolutionary history of chromosomes homeologous to Arabidopsis chromosome 4 was reconstructed by hybridization of chromosome-4-specific painting probes to karyotypes of Brassicaceae species with x = 8 chromosomes. Future perspectives of chromosome painting in A. thaliana and its wild relatives are outlined.

104 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Arabidopsis synthetic allopolyploids were capable of homologous pairing as early as three generations after their formation, indicating that diploid-like pairing is not the result of adaptive mutations in genes that regulate pairing nor the result in structural remodeling of the genomes.
Abstract: Although allopolyploids are common in nature and in agriculture, knowledge of their origin, evolution and genomic regulation is limited. We study synthetic allotetraploids of Arabidopsis thaliana and Arabidopsis arenosa as well as the natural allotetraploid Arabidopsis suecica. To elucidate the composition and behavior of the allotetraploid genome, we used chromosome painting with probes from contiguous regions of chromosome 4 of A. thaliana and fluorescent in-situ hybridization with centromeric (CEN) probes specific for each parental genome. We documented the presence of 16 A. arenosa and 10 A. thaliana chromosomes and demonstrate that two different A. arenosa chromosomes are homeologous to chromosome 4 of A. thaliana. Although chromosome pairing in pollen mother cells was predominantly homologous, CENs of different parental origin coalesced at early prophase I, but resolved into proper pairs by metaphase. In addition, CENs of homologous chromosomes were not paired in tapetum cells and endopolyploidy without strict polyteny was evident by the large number of independent CENs. Thus, the Arabidopsis synthetic allopolyploids were capable of homologous pairing as early as three generations after their formation. This indicates that diploid-like pairing is not the result of adaptive mutations in genes that regulate pairing nor the result of structural remodeling of the genomes: rather, it is likely that either the parents provided genes controlling pairing behavior or that features of the parental chromosomes hinder homeologous pairing.

80 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using flow cytometry, cytological variability within the genus Reyn outria is described based on 257 Reynoutria samples, finding tetraploid and octoploid cytotypes in R. sachalinensis and R. xbohemica exhibit some variation in chromosome numbers.

69 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is expected that preparation of HMW DNA from root tip nuclei will facilitate long-range mapping and construction of large-insert DNA libraries also in these species and open a way for construction of chromosome-specific large- insert libraries in plants.
Abstract: Simple, fast and cost-effective method for preparation of DNA with high molecular weight (HMW DNA) from plant nuclei and mitotic chromosomes has been developed. The technique involves mechanical homogenization of formaldehyde-fixed root tips, purification of nuclei and/or chromosomes on sucrose gradient, embedding in low-melting-point agarose, and DNA isolation in agarose plugs. Alternatively, nuclei and chromosomes may be purified using flow cytometry. Majority of DNA obtained is megabase-sized and well digestible by restriction endonucleases. The method is highly efficient as microgram amounts of DNA can be obtained from only several milligrams of plant tissue. Handling negligible amounts of plant material reduces the consumption of chemicals. Furthermore, the use of root tips makes it possible to obtain high-quality DNA even from plant species with leaves that are rigid or rich in secondary metabolites such as polyphenols. It is expected that preparation of HMW DNA from root tip nuclei will facilitate long-range mapping and construction of large-insert DNA libraries also in these species. Successful isolation of HMW DNA from flow-sorted chromosomes opens a way for construction of chromosome-specific large-insert libraries in plants.

62 citations