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Excessive Variation in Y Chromosomal DNA in Rumex acetosa (Polygonaceae)
Author(s) -
Korpelainen H.,
Kostamo K.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.871
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1438-8677
pISSN - 1435-8603
DOI - 10.1055/s-2006-924728
Subject(s) - biology , heterochromatin , genetics , chloroplast dna , polygonaceae , genetic variation , nucleotide diversity , evolutionary biology , haplotype , chromosome , genome , allele , gene , botany
Rumex acetosa is one of the few angiosperms that possesses sex chromosomes. The same types of abundant repetitive sequences cover both heterochromatic Y chromosomes present in males. The aim of this study was to investigate genetic variation in paternally inherited Y chromosomal DNA and in maternally inherited cpDNA, and to find out whether the examined genomic regions are suited to a phylogeographic study in R. acetosa. DNA sequence polymorphisms present in the 850‐bp heterochromatic segment on the Y chromosomes were compared to variation in the 409‐bp long chloroplast section ( trn L‐ trn F spacer) in R. acetosa originating from several European locations and from the Altai mountains in Russia. A great amount of genetic variation was detected within the Y chromosomal region while only four chloroplast genotypes were detected. Although the chloroplast haplotypes possessed some geographic pattern, no clear phylogeographic pattern was detected based on the variable Y chromosomes. The mean Y chromosomal nucleotide diversity among all samples equaled 6.6 %, and the mean proportion of polymorphic sites per individual equaled 8.2 % among SNP sites and 1.7 % among all sites investigated. The high number of substitutions detected in the Y chromosomal DNA shows that this heterochromatic sequence has a high mutation rate. The diversity pattern indicates that gene flow via pollen is extensive and it blurs any geographical pattern in the Y chromosomal variation. The high number of repeats and uncertainty concerning the extent of recombination between the two Y chromosomes impair the usability of the Y chromosomal segment for phylogeographic or population genetic studies.

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