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      Comparative Analysis of Miscanthus and Saccharum Reveals a Shared Whole-Genome Duplication but Different Evolutionary Fates.

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          Abstract

          Multiple polyploidizations with divergent consequences in the grass subtribe Saccharinae provide a singular opportunity to study in situ adaptation of a genome to the duplicated state, heretofore known primarily from paleogenomics. We show that allopolyploidy in a common Miscanthus-Saccharum ancestor ∼3.8 to 4.6 million years ago closely coincides in time with their divergence from the Sorghum lineage. Subsequent Saccharum-specific autopolyploidy may have created pseudo-paralogous chromosome groups with random pairing within a group but infrequent pairing between groups. High chromosome number may reduce differentiation among Saccharum pseudo-paralogs by increasing opportunities for recombinations, with the lower chromosome numbers of Miscanthus favoring the return to disomic inheritance. The widespread tendency of plant chromosome numbers to recursively return to a narrow range following genome duplication appears to be occurring now in Saccharum spontaneum based on rich polymorphism for chromosome number among genotypes, with past reductions indicated by condensations of two ancestral chromosomes in Miscanthus (now n = 19) and perhaps as many as 10 in the Narenga-Sclerostachya clade (n = 15).

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant Cell
          The Plant cell
          1532-298X
          1040-4651
          Jun 24 2014
          : 26
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602.
          [2 ] Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602 Center for Genomics and Computational Biology, College of Life Sciences, Hebei United University, Tangshan, Hebei 063000, China.
          [3 ] Mendel Biotechnology, Hayward, California 94545.
          [4 ] Department of Horticulture, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, 305-764, South Korea.
          [5 ] Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602 paterson@uga.edu.
          Article
          tpc.114.125583
          10.1105/tpc.114.125583
          4114942
          24963058
          168a41ba-15aa-4fed-bdaa-b5c725b735e5
          © 2014 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved.
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