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      Genetic and epigenetic interactions in allopolyploid plants.

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      Plant molecular biology
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Allopolyploid plants are hybrids that contain two copies of the genome from each parent. Whereas wild and cultivated allopolyploids are well adapted, man-made allopolyploids are typically unstable, displaying homeotic transformation and lethality as well as chromosomal rearrangements and changes in the number and distribution of repeated DNA sequences within heterochromatin. Large increases in the length of some chromosomes has been documented in allopolyploid hybrids and could be caused by the activation of dormant retrotransposons, as shown to be the case in marsupial hybrids. Synthetic (man-made) allotetraploids of Arabidopsis exhibit rapid changes in gene regulation, including gene silencing. These regulatory abnormalities could derive from ploidy changes and/or incompatible interactions between parental genomes, although comparison of auto- and allopolyploids suggests that intergenomic incompatibilities play the major role. Models to explain intergenomic incompatibilities incorporate both genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. In one model, the activation of heterochromatic transposons (McClintock's genomic shock) may lead to widespread perturbation of gene expression, perhaps by a silencing interaction between activated transposons and euchromatic genes. Qualitatively similar responses, of lesser intensity, may occur in intraspecific hybrids. Therefore, insight into genome function gained from the study of allopolyploidy may be applicable to hybrids of any type and may even elucidate positive interactions, such as those responsible for hybrid vigor.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant Mol Biol
          Plant molecular biology
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          0167-4412
          0167-4412
          Jun 2000
          : 43
          : 2-3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Botany, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-5325, USA. comai@u.washington.edu
          Article
          10.1023/a:1006480722854
          10999418
          3f639ddc-a94a-4785-a3e8-cf1391fbedb9
          History

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