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Systematic Status of the Glycine tomentella and G. tabacina Species Complexes (Fabaceae) Based on ITS Sequences of Nuclear Ribosomal DNA
Author(s) -
Yue-le C Hsing,
Jaw-Shu Hsieh,
Ching-l Peng,
Chang-Hung Chou,
TzenYuh Chiang
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of plant research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.795
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1618-0860
pISSN - 0918-9440
DOI - 10.1007/pl00014009
Subject(s) - biology , polyphyly , ploidy , botany , ribosomal dna , subgenus , internal transcribed spacer , species complex , genome , nuclear dna , fabaceae , ribosomal rna , clade , genetics , phylogenetic tree , gene , taxonomy (biology) , mitochondrial dna
Glycine   was reconstructed based on nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the nuclear ribosomal DNA to examine the systematic status of the G. tomentella and G. tabacina species complexes. Rooted at the subgenus Soja (2 species, 7 accessions), parsimony analysis was conducted for 17 species (31 accessions) of the subgenus Glycine, including 9 and 6 populations of G. tomentella s.l. and G. tabacina s.l., respectively. The nrlTS phytogeny indicated polyphyly of G. tomentella s.l. as well as G. tabacina s.l. In the G. tomentella species complex, larger legumes, narrower leaflets, and deflexed indumentum hairs differentiated G. dolichocarpa from G. tomentella s.s. The tetraploid G. dolichocarpa (2n=80) and aneuploid G. tomentella (2n= 38) represented independent lineages from another clade of the remaining diploid (2n=40) and tetraploid species with a DD genome type. Tetraploid G. tabacina (2n=80) was closely related to G. dolichocarpa instead of the diploid G. tabacina (2n=40) with a BB genome type. The nrlTS phytogeny suggested allopolyploidy of G. dolichocarpa and of the tetraploid G. tabacina, both of which possibly share a common parental species with an AA genome type. Their phylogenetic affinity also indicated biased inheritance of the nrDNA ITS and a possible dominant role of the AA genome. Phylogenetically, G. dolichocarpa and allotetraploid G. tabacina should be recognized as distinct species.

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