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1.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 20746, 2023 11 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38007576

ABSTRACT

Vicia sepium (bush vetch) is a perennial legume widely distributed throughout the Eurasian continent. However, its distribution in Japan is limited to Mt. Ibuki and small parts of central and southern Hokkaido. Therefore, each Japanese V. sepium lineage has been considered to have been introduced separately from Europe. Here, we examined whether the species was introduced or not on the basis of cpDNA sequences and genome-wide SNPs from Japanese and overseas samples. Both the cpDNA haplotype network and the nuclear DNA phylogenetic tree showed that Japanese V. sepium is monophyletic. Furthermore, although the nuclear DNA phylogenetic tree also showed that each lineage is clearly monophyletic, genetic admixture of the genetic cluster dominated in the Hokkaido lineage was also detected in the Mt. Ibuki lineage. Population divergence analysis showed that the two lineages diverged during the last glacial period. The Mt. Ibuki lineage showed a sudden population decline 300-400 years ago, indicating that some anthropogenic activity might be involved, while the Hokkaido lineage showed a gradual population decline from 5000 years ago. Consequently, these two lineages show low current genetic diversity compared with overseas lineages. These results show that the Japanese V. sepium is not introduced but is native.


Subject(s)
Vicia , Animals , Phylogeny , Japan , Vicia/genetics , DNA, Chloroplast , Haplotypes , Demography , Genetic Variation , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics
2.
BMC Plant Biol ; 21(1): 544, 2021 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34800974

ABSTRACT

Vicia amoena is a high-nutritional quality forage similar to alfalfa. However, studies on the genetic background of V. amoena are scarce. In the present study, the genetic variation of 24 V. amoena populations was assessed with newly developed simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers. A total of 8799 SSRs were identified in the V. amoena genomic-enriched sequences, and the most abundant repeat number was four. A total of 569 sampled individuals were assayed to evaluate the genetic diversity of the V. amoena populations based on 21 polymorphic SSR primers. The polymorphism information content (PIC) ranged from 0.896 to 0.968, with an average of 0.931, which indicated that the markers were highly informative. Based on analysis of molecular variance, 88% of the variance occurred within populations, and the remaining 12% of the variance occurred among populations. The high degree of gene flow (Nm= 4.958) also showed slight differentiation among the V. amoena populations. The V. amoena populations were mainly clustered by steppe and mountain habitats based on principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) and STRUCTURE analysis. This indicated that the elevation and special habitat of geographical origins may be important factors affecting the clustered pattern of V. amoena populations. Neighbour-joining (NJ) analysis did not separate the populations well by geographical origin, which indicated that the genetic structure of V. amoena was complex and needs further study. Overall, our results showed that the newly developed SSR markers could benefit the V. amoena research community by providing genetic background information to help establish a foundation for breeding improvement and germplasm resource conservation.


Subject(s)
Genetic Markers , Genomics , Microsatellite Repeats , Polymorphism, Genetic , Vicia/genetics , China , Crops, Agricultural/genetics , Ecosystem , Genotype , Geography , Phylogeny
3.
Photosynth Res ; 140(3): 289-299, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30413987

ABSTRACT

The contents of photosynthetic pigments are an important indicator of many processes taking place in the plant body. Still, however, our knowledge of the effects of polyploidization, a major driver of speciation in vascular plants, on the contents of photosynthetic pigments is very sparse. We compared the contents of photosynthetic pigments among natural diploids, natural tetraploids, and synthetic tetraploids. The material originated from four natural mixed-cytotype populations of diploid and autotetraploid Vicia cracca (Fabaceae) occurring in the contact zone between the cytotypes in Central Europe and was cultivated under uniform conditions. We explored whether the contents of pigments are primarily driven by polyploidization or by subsequent evolution of the polyploid lineage and whether the patterns differ between populations. We also explored the relationship between pigment contents and plant performance. We found very few significant effects of the cytotype on the individual pigments but many significant interactions between the cytotype and the population. In pair-wise comparisons, many comparisons were not significant. The prevailing pattern among the significant once was that the contents of pigments were determined by polyploidization rather than by subsequent evolution of the polyploid lineage. The contents of the pigments turned out to be a useful predictor of plant performance not only at the time of material collection, but also at the end of the growing season. Further studies exploring differences in the contents of photosynthetic pigments in different cytotypes using replicated populations and assessing their relationship to plant performance are needed to assess the generality of our findings.


Subject(s)
Photosynthesis/genetics , Pigments, Biological/genetics , Vicia/genetics , Diploidy , Pigments, Biological/metabolism , Polyploidy , Tetraploidy , Vicia/physiology
4.
J Biotechnol ; 257: 22-34, 2017 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28755910

ABSTRACT

We introduce an easy, fast and effective method to analyze the influence of genetically modified (GM) plants on soil and model organisms in the laboratory to substitute laborious and time consuming field trials. For the studies described here we focused on two GM plants of the so-called 3rd generation: GM plants producing pharmaceuticals (PMP) and plant made industrials (PMI). Cyanophycin synthetase (cphA) was chosen as model for PMI and Choleratoxin B (CTB) as model for PMP. The model genes are expressed in transgenic roots of composite Vicia hirsuta plants grown in petri dishes for semi-sterile growth or small containers filled with non-sterile soil. No significant influence of the model gene expression on root induction, growth, biomass, interaction with symbionts such as rhizobia (number, size and functionality of nodules, selection of nodulating strains) or arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could be detected. In vitro, but not in situ under field conditions, structural diversity of the bulk soil microbial community between transgenic and non-transgenic cultivars was determined by PLFA pattern-derived ratios of bacteria: fungi and of gram+: gram- bacteria. Significant differences in PLFA ratios were associated with dissimilarities in the quantity and molecular composition of rhizodeposits as revealed by Py-FIMS analyses. Contrary to field trials, where small effects based on the transgene expression might be hidden by the immense influence of various environmental factors, our in vitro system can detect even minor effects and correlates them to transgene expression with less space, time and labour.


Subject(s)
Environment , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/microbiology , Soil Microbiology , Vicia/genetics , Vicia/microbiology , Agrobacterium , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biomass , Ecology , Fatty Acids/analysis , Fungi/classification , Fungi/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Mycorrhizae/classification , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Phospholipids/analysis , Plant Proteins/analysis , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Roots/microbiology , Rhizobium/classification , Rhizosphere , Risk Assessment , Sensitivity and Specificity , Soil/chemistry , Spores, Fungal , Symbiosis , Vicia/metabolism
5.
Ann Bot ; 120(2): 329-339, 2017 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28633349

ABSTRACT

Background and Aims: Understanding the direct consequences of polyploidization is necessary for assessing the evolutionary significance of this mode of speciation. Previous studies have not studied the degree of between-population variation that occurs due to these effects. Although it is assumed that the effects of the substances that create synthetic polyploids disappear in second-generation synthetic polyploids, this has not been tested. Methods: The direct consequences of polyploidization were assessed and separated from the effects of subsequent evolution in Vicia cracca , a naturally occurring species with diploid and autotetraploid cytotypes. Synthetic tetraploids were created from diploids of four mixed-ploidy populations. Performance of natural diploids and tetraploids was compared with that of synthetic tetraploids. Diploid offspring of the synthetic tetraploid mothers were also included in the comparison. In this way, the effects of colchicine application in the maternal generation on offspring performance could be compared independently of the effects of polyploidization. Key Results: The sizes of seeds and stomata were primarily affected by cytotype, while plant performance differed between natural and synthetic polyploids. Most performance traits were also determined by colchicine application to the mothers, and most of these results were largely population specific. Conclusions: Because the consequences of colchicine application are still apparent in the second generation of the plants, at least the third-generation polyploids should be considered in future comparisons. The specificities of the colchicine-treated plants may also be caused by strong selection pressures during the creation of synthetic polyploids. This could be tested by comparing the initial sizes of plants that survived the colchicine treatments with those of plants that did not. High variation between populations also suggests that different polyploids follow different evolutionary trajectories, and this should be considered when studying the effects of polyploidization.


Subject(s)
Colchicine/pharmacology , Polyploidy , Vicia/genetics , Diploidy , Evolution, Molecular , Tetraploidy , Vicia/drug effects
6.
J Plant Res ; 130(4): 677-687, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28290078

ABSTRACT

Vicia cracca diploids and autotetraploids are highly parapatric in Europe; tetraploids reside in western and northern part, whereas diploids occupy much drier south-eastern part. They meet together in a Central European contact zone. This distribution pattern raised questions about a transformative effect of polyploidization on plant performance and environmental tolerances. We investigated plant survival, growth, and seed production in two water regimes in a common garden experiment using seeds collected from five localities in the Central European contact zone where diploids and tetraploids occur in sympatry. Obtained data imply that tetraploids of V. cracca are not generally superior in performance to diploids. Significantly larger seeds from tetraploid mother plants collected in the field were not correlated with greater stature of the seedlings. Nonetheless, tetraploids might have a potential to out-compete diploids in the long run due to the tetraploids' ability of greater growth which manifested in the second year of cultivation. Considering the response of diploids and tetraploids to water supply, drought stressed tetraploids but not diploids produced a higher proportion of aborted seeds than watered ones, which implies that tetraploids are more drought susceptible than diploids. On the other hand, decreased plant height in drought stresses tetraploids, which simultaneously increased total seed production, may suggest that tetraploids have a greater ability to avoid local extinction under unfavourable conditions by enhancing biomass allocation into production of seeds at the cost of lower growth. The significant interaction between ploidy level and locality in several traits suggests possible polyfyletic origin of tetraploids and the necessity to clarify the history of the tetraploids in Europe.


Subject(s)
Vicia/genetics , Biomass , Diploidy , Europe , Gardens , Ploidies , Seedlings/genetics , Seedlings/growth & development , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/growth & development , Sympatry , Tetraploidy , Vicia/growth & development
7.
PLoS One ; 12(1): e0170695, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28135314

ABSTRACT

Vicia ramuliflora L. is a widely distributed species in Eurasia with high economic value. For past 200 years, it has evolved a tetraploid cytotype and new subspecies at the diploid level. Based on taxonomy, cytogeography and other lines of evidence, previous studies have provided valuable information about the evolution of V. ramuliflora ploidy level, but due to the limited resolution of traditional methods, important questions remain. In this study, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) were used to analyze the evolution of V. ramuliflora at the diploid and tetraploid levels. Our aim was to reveal the genomic constitution and parents of the tetraploid V. ramuliflora and the relationships among diploid V. ramuliflora populations. Our study showed that the tetraploid cytotype of V. ramuliflora at Changbai Mountains (M) has identical 18S and 5S rDNA distribution patterns with the diploid Hengdaohezi population (B) and the diploid Dailing population (H). However, UPGMA clustering, Neighbor-Joining clustering and principal coordinates analysis based on RAPD showed that the tetraploid cytotype (M) has more close relationships with Qianshan diploid population T. Based on our results and the fact that interspecific hybridization among Vicia species is very difficult, we think that the tetraploid V. ramuliflora is an autotetraploid and its genomic origin still needs further study. In addition, our study also found that Qianshan diploid population (T) had evolved distinct new traits compared with other diploid populations, which hints that V. ramuliflora evolved further at diploid level. We suggest that diploid population T be re-classified as a new subspecies.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Diploidy , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence/methods , Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique/methods , Tetraploidy , Vicia/genetics , China , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , DNA Probes/metabolism , Genetic Markers , Geography , Metaphase , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Genetic , RNA, Ribosomal, 5S/genetics
8.
J Biotechnol ; 243: 48-60, 2017 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28011129

ABSTRACT

We introduce an easy, fast and effective method to analyze the influence of genetically modified (GM) plants on soil and model organisms in the laboratory to substitute laborious and time consuming field trials. For the studies described here we focused on two GM plants of the so-called 3rd generation: GM plants producing pharmaceuticals (PMP) and plant made industrials (PMI). Cyanophycin synthetase (cphA) was chosen as model for PMI and Choleratoxin B (CTB) as model for PMP. The model genes are expressed in transgenic roots of composite Vicia hirsuta plants grown in petri dishes for semi-sterile growth or small containers filled with non-sterile soil. No significant influence of the model gene expression on root induction, growth, biomass, interaction with symbionts such as rhizobia (number, size and functionality of nodules, selection of nodulating strains) or arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could be detected. In vitro, but not in situ under field conditions, structural diversity of the bulk soil microbial community between transgenic and non-transgenic cultivars was determined by PLFA pattern-derived ratios of bacteria: fungi and of gram+: gram- bacteria. Significant differences in PLFA ratios were associated with dissimilarities in the quantity and molecular composition of rhizodeposits as revealed by Py-FIMS analyses. Contrary to field trials, where small effects based on the transgene expression might be hidden by the immense influence of various environmental factors, our in vitro system can detect even minor effects and correlates them to transgene expression with less space, time and labour.


Subject(s)
Environment , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/microbiology , Soil Microbiology , Vicia/genetics , Vicia/microbiology , Agrobacterium , Bacteria/classification , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biomass , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Models, Genetic , Mycorrhizae/classification , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Plant Proteins/analysis , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Roots/microbiology , Rhizobium/classification , Spores, Fungal , Symbiosis , Vicia/metabolism
9.
BMC Evol Biol ; 16: 71, 2016 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27044655

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mixed dispersal syndromes have historically been regarded as a bet-hedging mechanism that enhances survivorship in unpredictable environments, ensuring that some propagules stay in the maternal environment while others can potentially colonize new sites. However, this entails paying the costs of both dispersal and non-dispersal. Propagules that disperse are likely to encounter unfavorable conditions, while non-dispersing propagules might form inbred populations of close relatives. Here, we investigate the conditions under which mixed dispersal syndromes emerge and are evolutionarily stable, taking into account the risks of both environmental unpredictability and inbreeding. RESULTS: Using mathematical and computational modeling, we show that high dispersal propensity is favored whenever environmental unpredictability is low and inbreeding depression high, whereas mixed dispersal syndromes are adaptive under high environmental unpredictability, more particularly if inbreeding depression is small. Although pure dispersal is frequently adaptive, mixed dispersal represents the optimal strategy under many different parameterizations of our models, indicating that this strategy is likely to be favored in a wide variety of contexts. Furthermore, monomorphic populations go inevitably extinct when environmental and genetic costs are high, whilst mixed strategies can maintain viable populations even under very extreme conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Our models support the hypothesis that the interplay between inbreeding depression and environmental unpredictability shapes dispersal syndromes, often resulting in mixed strategies. Moreover, mixed dispersal seems to facilitate persistence whenever conditions are critical or nearly critical for survival.


Subject(s)
Inbreeding , Lathyrus/genetics , Models, Biological , Seed Dispersal , Vicia/genetics , Biological Evolution , Computer Simulation , Environment , Lathyrus/physiology , Vicia/physiology
10.
J Plant Physiol ; 184: 37-48, 2015 Jul 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26210320

ABSTRACT

Galactinol is the galactosyl donor for the biosynthesis of both the raffinose family oligosaccharides (RFOs) and galactosyl cyclitols (Gal-C). Its synthesis by galactinol synthase (GolS, EC 2.4.1.123) is the first committed step of the soluble α-D-galactosides biosynthetic pathway in orthodox seeds. The deposition of galactosides in seeds is suggested to be associated with desiccation tolerance (DT). In this work, for the first time, we cloned and characterized two Vicia hirsuta (L.) S.F. Gray galactinol synthase genes (VhGolS1, VhGolS2), analyzed galactinol synthase activity and measured the accumulation of galactosides of both sucrose and D-pinitol in relation to the acquisition of DT in developing seeds of this wild species. A developmentally induced increase of VhGolS1 expression preceded the rise of GolS activity in crude protein extract from maturing seeds, while the expression of the VhGolS2 gene remained low. GolS activity peaked just after the beginning of the maturation drying phase. The increase of GolS activity was not followed by galactinol accumulation, instead the high enzyme activity was related to high levels of galactose bound in soluble galactosides of the RFO and galactosyl pinitol series. Acquisition of DT coincided with an increase of VhGolS1 expression, high galactinol synthase activity and the accumulation of oligogalactosides in seeds. DT was positively correlated with the high content of soluble α-D-galactosides of both the RFO and galactosyl pinitol series as well as with the amount of galactose bound in these galactosides.


Subject(s)
Droughts , Galactosyltransferases/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Proteins/genetics , Vicia/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Cyclitols/metabolism , Desiccation , Galactosides/metabolism , Galactosyltransferases/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Raffinose/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Vicia/genetics
11.
Molecules ; 20(1): 1543-50, 2015 Jan 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25608853

ABSTRACT

The temperate and herbaceous genus Vicia L. is a member of the legume tribe Fabeae of the subfamily Papilionoideae. The genus Vicia comprises 166 annual or perennial species distributed mainly in Europe, Asia, and North America, but also extending to the temperate regions of South America and tropical Africa. The use of simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers for Vicia species has not been investigated as extensively as for other crop species. In this study, we assessed the potential for cross-species amplification of cDNA microsatellite markers developed from common vetch (Vicia sativa subsp. sativa). For cross-species amplification of the SSRs, amplification was carried out with genomic DNA isolated from two to eight accessions of 22 different Vicia species. For individual species or subspecies, the transferability rates ranged from 33% for V. ervilia to 82% for V. sativa subsp. nigra with an average rate of 52.0%. Because the rate of successful SSR marker amplification generally correlates with genetic distance, these SSR markers are potentially useful for analyzing genetic relationships between or within Vicia species.


Subject(s)
Microsatellite Repeats/genetics , Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques/methods , Vicia sativa/genetics , Vicia/genetics , Genetic Markers , Phylogeny , Species Specificity
12.
Ann Bot ; 113(1): 159-70, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24232383

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Despite the great importance of autopolyploidy in the evolution of angiosperms, relatively little attention has been devoted to autopolyploids in natural polyploid systems. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain why autopolyploids are so common and successful, for example increased genetic diversity and heterozygosity and the transition towards selfing. However, case studies on patterns of genetic diversity and on mating systems in autopolyploids are scarce. In this study allozymes were employed to investigate the origin, population genetic diversity and mating system in the contact zone between diploid and assumed autotetraploid cytotypes of Vicia cracca in Central Europe. METHODS: Four enzyme systems resolved in six putative loci were investigated in ten diploid, ten tetraploid and five mixed-ploidy populations. Genetic diversity and heterozygosity, partitioning of genetic diversity among populations and cytotypes, spatial genetic structure and fixed heterozygosity were analysed. These studies were supplemented by a pollination experiment and meiotic chromosome observation. KEY RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Weak evidence of fixed heterozygosity, a low proportion of unique alleles and genetic variation between cytotypes similar to the variation among populations within cytotypes supported the autopolyploid origin of tetraploids, although no multivalent formation was observed. Tetraploids possessed more alleles than diploids and showed higher observed zygotic heterozygosity than diploids, but the observed gametic heterozygosity was similar to the value observed in diploids and smaller than expected under panmixis. Values of the inbreeding coefficient and differentiation among populations (ρST) suggested that the breeding system in both cytotypes of V. cracca is mixed mating with prevailing outcrossing. The reduction in seed production of tetraploids after selfing was less than that in diploids. An absence of correlation between genetic and geographic distances and high differentiation among neighbouring tetraploid populations supports the secondary contact hypothesis with tetraploids of several independent origins in Central Europe. Nevertheless, the possibility of a recent in situ origin of tetraploids through a triploid bridge in some regions is also discussed.


Subject(s)
Diploidy , Genetic Variation , Genetics, Population , Pollination/genetics , Seeds/genetics , Self-Fertilization/genetics , Tetraploidy , Vicia/genetics , Alleles , Czech Republic , Europe , Heterozygote , Isoenzymes/genetics , Slovakia
13.
J Environ Radioact ; 121: 22-32, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22483340

ABSTRACT

The results of field studies carried out on different plant species (winter rye and wheat, spring barley, oats, Scots pine, wild vetch, crested hairgrass) in various radioecological situations (nuclear weapon testing, the Chernobyl accident, uranium and radium processing) to investigate the effects of long-term chronic exposure to radionuclides are discussed. Plant populations growing in areas with relatively low levels of pollution are characterized by an increased level of both cytogenetic disturbances and genetic diversity. Although ionizing radiation causes primary damage at the molecular level, there are emergent effects at the level of populations, non-predictable from the knowledge of elementary mechanisms of cellular effects formation. Accumulation of cellular alterations may afterward influence biological parameters important for populations such as health and reproduction. Presented data provide evidence that in plant populations inhabiting heavily contaminated territories cytogenetic damage could be accompanied by a decrease in reproductive capacity. However, in less contaminated sites, because of the scarcity of data available, a steady relationship between cytogenetic effects and reproductive capacity was not revealed. Under radioactive contamination of the plant's environment, a population's resistance to exposure may increase. However, there are radioecological situations where an enhanced radioresistance has not evolved or has not persisted.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Genetics, Population , Plants/radiation effects , Radiation Monitoring/methods , Radioisotopes/toxicity , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Adaptation, Physiological/radiation effects , Avena/genetics , Avena/radiation effects , Chernobyl Nuclear Accident , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Hordeum/genetics , Hordeum/radiation effects , Longitudinal Studies , Nuclear Weapons , Pinus sylvestris/genetics , Pinus sylvestris/radiation effects , Plants/genetics , Poaceae/genetics , Poaceae/radiation effects , Secale/genetics , Secale/radiation effects , Siberia , Soil Pollutants, Radioactive/adverse effects , Vicia/genetics , Vicia/radiation effects
14.
BMC Evol Biol ; 12: 250, 2012 Dec 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23267563

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tribe Fabeae comprises about 380 legume species, including some of the most ancient and important crops like lentil, pea, and broad bean. Breeding efforts in legume crops rely on a detailed knowledge of closest wild relatives and geographic origin. Relationships within the tribe, however, are incompletely known and previous molecular results conflicted with the traditional morphology-based classification. Here we analyse the systematics, biogeography, and character evolution in the tribe based on plastid and nuclear DNA sequences. RESULTS: Phylogenetic analyses including c. 70% of the species in the tribe show that the genera Vicia and Lathyrus in their current circumscription are not monophyletic: Pisum and Vavilovia are nested in Lathyrus, the genus Lens is nested in Vicia. A small, well-supported clade including Vicia hirsuta, V. sylvatica, and some Mediterranean endemics, is the sister group to all remaining species in the tribe. Fabeae originated in the East Mediterranean region in the Miocene (23-16 million years ago (Ma)) and spread at least 39 times into Eurasia, seven times to the Americas, twice to tropical Africa and four times to Macaronesia. Broad bean (V. faba) and its sister V. paucijuga originated in Asia and might be sister to V. oroboides. Lentil (Lens culinaris ssp. culinaris) is of Mediterranean origin and together with eight very close relatives forms a clade that is nested in the core Vicia, where it evolved c. 14 Ma. The Pisum clade is nested in Lathyrus in a grade with the Mediterranean L. gloeosperma, L. neurolobus, and L. nissolia. The extinct Azorean endemic V. dennesiana belongs in section Cracca and is nested among Mediterranean species. According to our ancestral character state reconstruction results, ancestors of Fabeae had a basic chromosome number of 2n=14, an annual life form, and evenly hairy, dorsiventrally compressed styles. CONCLUSIONS: Fabeae evolved in the Eastern Mediterranean in the middle Miocene and spread from there across Eurasia, into Tropical Africa, and at least seven times to the Americas. The middle-Atlantic islands were colonized four times but apparently did not serve as stepping-stones for Atlantic crossings. Long-distance dispersal events are relatively common in Fabeae (seven per ten million years). Current generic and infrageneric circumscriptions in Fabeae do not reflect monophyletic groups and should be revised. Suggestions for generic level delimitation are offered.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Fabaceae/genetics , Genetic Variation , Phylogeny , Atlantic Islands , Fabaceae/classification , Fabaceae/growth & development , Geography , Lathyrus/classification , Lathyrus/genetics , Lathyrus/growth & development , Pisum sativum/classification , Pisum sativum/genetics , Pisum sativum/growth & development , Species Specificity , Time Factors , Vicia/classification , Vicia/genetics , Vicia/growth & development
15.
Mol Biol Rep ; 39(12): 10681-95, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23053965

ABSTRACT

A number of alleles of an orthologous gene His6 encoding histone H1 subtype f (H1-6 in pea) accumulated in chromatin of old tissues were sequenced in three legume species: seven alleles in Pisum sativum, four in Vicia unijuga and eight in Lathyrus gmelinii. In the total of 19 alleles sequenced in the three species, 29 non-synonymous substitutions and six indels were found in the coding region; most of amino acid substitutions (26 of 29) and all indels occurred in the C-terminal hydrophilic domain of the encoded protein. All species were polymorphic for some non-synonymous substitutions, V. unijuga was also polymorphic for one and P. sativum for two indels. Three near-isogenic lines of P. sativum bearing different alleles showed differences in many quantitative traits; that in the growth dynamic could be tentatively attributed to the allelic substitution of subtype H1-6. The frequencies of four electromorphs in a sampled locality of V. unijuga were found to be close to those observed 25 years ago, although their rapid change in the past was supposed in the previous study.


Subject(s)
Fabaceae/genetics , Histones/chemistry , Histones/genetics , Polymorphism, Genetic , Alleles , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Electrophoresis, Agar Gel , Fabaceae/anatomy & histology , Histones/isolation & purification , INDEL Mutation/genetics , Introns/genetics , Lathyrus/anatomy & histology , Lathyrus/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleotides/genetics , Pisum sativum/anatomy & histology , Pisum sativum/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Quantitative Trait, Heritable , Sequence Alignment , Species Specificity , Vicia/anatomy & histology , Vicia/genetics
16.
Protoplasma ; 249(3): 779-88, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21969240

ABSTRACT

Vicia barbazitae, a taxon belonging to section Vicia of subgenus Vicia, was recovered and analysed by cytological, karyological and molecular methods with the aim of both proposing a general characterisation of this species and studying the relationships among the species of section Vicia . Phylogenetic relationships among the species of the section Vicia and those of the sections Microcarinae, Wiggersia and Atossa were also analysed. Automated karyotype analysis has been determined after Feulgen's reaction; chromosome banding was performed by sequence-specific fluorochrome staining. Fluorescent chromosome banding showed CMA(+)/DAPI(-) NOR-associated heterochromatin in the satellite pair. Karyomorphological parameters, based on symmetry indices, the dendrogram of linkage distance constructed on 37 chromosome parameters, as well as the molecular data based on internal transcribed spacer sequences provided information about phylogenetic position of this species inside the section Vicia and among the species belonging to the sections Microcarinae, Wiggersia, Atossa and Vicia. From our karyological and molecular results, it emerges that V. barbazitae can be considered a natural member of section Vicia.


Subject(s)
Vicia/cytology , Vicia/genetics , Chromosome Banding , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Plant/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Genetic Linkage , Karyotype , Metaphase , Molecular Typing , Phylogeny , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Vicia/classification
17.
Pak J Biol Sci ; 15(8): 380-5, 2012 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24199467

ABSTRACT

Faba bean is one of the most important cool season crops in the highlands of Ethiopia and the country is considered as the secondary center of diversity. This study was conducted at Haramaya, Boreda and Hirna districts of Eastern Hararghe from 2006 to 2008 cropping season using twenty five elite genotypes of faba bean to determine the extent and pattern of genetic diversity for seed yield and related traits. The treatments were arranged in a randomized complete block design with three replications. The data were subjected to the analyses of variance using the SAS program. The mean squares due to genotypes were highly significant for seed yield (p < 0.01) indicating the existence of sufficient genetic variability for seed yield. Mean squares due to the interaction between year and location were highly significant for all the traits studied (p < 0.01). High genotypic coefficient of variation (10093.53%) was observed for seed yield followed by number of seeds per plant (325.45%). The estimated values of phenotypic variances were in the range of 0.60 for number of seeds per pods to 196564.64 for seed yield. Genetic gains that expected from selecting the top 5% of the genotypes, as a percent of the mean, varied from 12.32% for number of seeds per plant to 35.46% for seed yield. The average linkage technique of clustering produced a more understandable portrayal of the 25 faba bean genotypes by grouping them into five clusters. The maximum distance was found between cluster three and five (D2 = 691.47). Thus, the materials tested in the entire experiment will be maintained for further breeding program.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Genotype , Seeds , Vicia/genetics , Vicia/embryology
18.
J Plant Res ; 124(4): 477-87, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21706139

ABSTRACT

Abscisic acid (ABA) signaling mechanisms have been studied in a broad variety of plant species using complementary analyses, taking advantage of different methodologies suitable for each plant species. Early studies on ABA biosynthesis using Solanum lycopersicum mutants suggested an importance of ABA synthesis in stomatal closure. To understand ABA signaling in guard cells, cellular, biochemical and electrophysiological studies in Vicia faba and Commelina communis have been conducted, providing fundamental knowledge that was further reconfirmed by molecular genetic studies of Arabidopsis. In this article, examples of stomatal studies in several plants and prospects in ABA research are discussed.


Subject(s)
Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Commelina/physiology , Plant Stomata/physiology , Signal Transduction , Vicia/physiology , Calcium/metabolism , Calcium Channels/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Commelina/genetics , Germination , Mesophyll Cells/metabolism , Plant Stomata/genetics , Seeds/metabolism , Vicia/genetics
19.
Genetika ; 47(4): 484-91, 2011 Apr.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21675237

ABSTRACT

Polymorphism analysis was performed in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viceae populations isolated from geographically distant regions of Ukraine and Middle Asia. Examination of cultural, biochemical, and symbiotic traits revealed interpopulation differences, which were attributed to the difference in conditions between natural ecosystems and agrocenoses. Vetch has high species diversity and is not cultivated in Middle Asia, and the corresponding rhizobial population displayed higher genetic diversity and higher polymorphism of adaptive traits ensuring saprophytic development in soil and the rhizosphere, including melanin synthesis (35%) and active exopolysaccharide production (90%). Strains of the Ukrainian population had a lower exopolysaccharide production (10%), did not produce melanin, had higher herbicide resistance, and utilized glucose and succinate (main components of plant root exudation) as carbon sources. Strains capable of efficient symbiosis with Vicia villosa Roth. had a higher frequency in the Middle Asian than in the Ukrainian population, especially among strains isolated from soil (80 and 35%, respectively). In addition, strains of the Middle Asian population better competed for nodulation. It was assumed that the formation of rhizobial populations in vetch cultivation regions (Ukraine) is aimed at adaptation to ectosymbiotic (rhizospheric) interactions with plants and anthropogenic stress factors, while strains of the vetch original center (Middle Asia) are mostly adapted to the endosymbiotic interaction and to natural edaphic stress factors.


Subject(s)
Plant Roots/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum , Rhizosphere , Vicia/microbiology , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Asia , Ecosystem , Genetic Variation , Plant Roots/genetics , Rhizobium/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/isolation & purification , Soil Microbiology , Symbiosis/genetics , Ukraine , Vicia/genetics
20.
Protoplasma ; 248(4): 707-16, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21057828

ABSTRACT

Automated karyotype analyses and sequence of rDNA spacers have been analysed for the species belonging to sections Atossa, Microcarinae, Wiggersia and Vicia. Karyomorphological parameters, based on Rec, Syi and TF% indices, have been determined and evidenced that, in term of symmetry, the karyotype of Vicia lathyroides was the most asymmetric one. A multivariate analysis using 34 karyological parameters, in addition to the symmetry indices, has been carried out and the corresponding dendrogram of linkage distances showed six different groups. Molecular investigations on the inclusive group in study by employing ITS DNA sequences indicated a different pattern of relationships. The cladistic analysis combining the molecular data set with karyological parameters evidenced that the species of sections Vicia and Atossa join closely to each other in a paraphyletic group, which includes the monophyletic section Wiggersia. Therefore, our karyological and molecular data provide information about the phylogenetic position of the analysed species inside the subgenus Vicia and are discussed in relation to previous results obtained by morphology, isozymes and ribosomal genes analyses.


Subject(s)
DNA, Plant/genetics , Karyotype , Phylogeny , Vicia/classification , Vicia/cytology , Base Sequence , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Haploidy , Karyotyping/methods , Plant Roots/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity , Vicia/genetics
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