Genic heterozygosity, chromosomal interchanges and fitness in rye: any relationship? 2006

Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
Departamento de Genética, Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense, 28040 Madrid, Spain. anafig@bio.ucm.es

Relationship between heterozygosity at allozyme loci, chromosomal interchanges and fitness was analyzed in a rye cultivar showing a polymorphism for such rearrangements. Nine allozyme systems (ACO, ACPH, GOT, GPI, LAP, MDH, PER, PGD and PGM) and five components of fitness (number of fertile tillers, total offspring, egg cell fertility, flowers/ear and seeds/ear) were studied. The estimated selection coefficients against interchange heterozygotes ranged from s = 0.12 to s = 0.34. A significant effect of the genic heterozygosity on some fitness components was observed in interchange heterozygotes (tillering and total offspring), in their standard homozygous sibs (flowers/ear and seeds/ear) and in the descendants of the crosses between standard karyotypes (flowers/ear, seeds/ear and egg cell fertility). However, the main effect was linked to genetic background associated to different crosses. Significant differences for Acph-1, Gpi-1, Lap-1, Mdh-1, Mdh-4, Pgd-2 and Pgm-1 loci were also found in some of these crosses although these differences were inconsistent. This suggests that probably the allozyme loci analyzed were not directly contributing to the fitness and that they are linked, in some cases, to different deleterious alleles depending on both cross and locus. This fact could support the local effect hypothesis as explanation although we do not discard the existence of some inbreeding level (general effect hypothesis) since all crosses and loci studied show a overall consistent trend of increased fitness with increased heterozygosity.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007527 Isoenzymes Structurally related forms of an enzyme. Each isoenzyme has the same mechanism and classification, but differs in its chemical, physical, or immunological characteristics. Alloenzyme,Allozyme,Isoenzyme,Isozyme,Isozymes,Alloenzymes,Allozymes
D011110 Polymorphism, Genetic The regular and simultaneous occurrence in a single interbreeding population of two or more discontinuous genotypes. The concept includes differences in genotypes ranging in size from a single nucleotide site (POLYMORPHISM, SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE) to large nucleotide sequences visible at a chromosomal level. Gene Polymorphism,Genetic Polymorphism,Polymorphism (Genetics),Genetic Polymorphisms,Gene Polymorphisms,Polymorphism, Gene,Polymorphisms (Genetics),Polymorphisms, Gene,Polymorphisms, Genetic
D003433 Crosses, Genetic Deliberate breeding of two different individuals that results in offspring that carry part of the genetic material of each parent. The parent organisms must be genetically compatible and may be from different varieties or closely related species. Cross, Genetic,Genetic Cross,Genetic Crosses
D006579 Heterozygote An individual having different alleles at one or more loci regarding a specific character. Carriers, Genetic,Genetic Carriers,Carrier, Genetic,Genetic Carrier,Heterozygotes
D006720 Homozygote An individual in which both alleles at a given locus are identical. Homozygotes
D000483 Alleles Variant forms of the same gene, occupying the same locus on homologous CHROMOSOMES, and governing the variants in production of the same gene product. Allelomorphs,Allele,Allelomorph
D012434 Secale Genus in the grass family (Poaceae) including well known species Secale cereale (rye). Rye,Secale cereale,Ryes
D014178 Translocation, Genetic A type of chromosome aberration characterized by CHROMOSOME BREAKAGE and transfer of the broken-off portion to another location, often to a different chromosome. Chromosomal Translocation,Translocation, Chromosomal,Chromosomal Translocations,Genetic Translocation,Genetic Translocations,Translocations, Chromosomal,Translocations, Genetic
D017343 Genes, Plant The functional hereditary units of PLANTS. Plant Genes,Gene, Plant,Plant Gene
D032461 Chromosomes, Plant Complex nucleoprotein structures which contain the genomic DNA and are part of the CELL NUCLEUS of PLANTS. Chromosome, Plant,Plant Chromosome,Plant Chromosomes

Related Publications

Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
January 1935, Genetics,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
June 1982, TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
September 1974, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
August 1973, Journal of mammalogy,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
November 1995, Genetics,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
May 1977, Animal behaviour,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
October 1998, Heredity,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
July 1987, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
March 1975, Genetics,
Ana M Figueiras, and M Teresa González-Jaén, and Milagros Candela, and César Benito
May 2010, The American naturalist,
Copied contents to your clipboard!