AOBPreview originally published online on February 8, 2005
Annals of Botany 2005 95(5):789-797; doi:10.1093/aob/mci078
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Estimation of the Nuclear DNA Content of Gossypium Species
University of Arkansas, 115 Plant Science Building, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USA
* For correspondence. E-mail jstewart{at}uark.edu
Received: 9 August 2004 Returned for revision: 25 September 2004 Accepted: 30 November 2004 Published electronically: 8 February 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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Background and Aims Gossypium is an economically important, globally distributed taxon comprising more than 50 species. DNA content estimates from about half of the species indicate over a 3-fold variation exists. However, the nine DNA content estimates for G. hirsutum reveal over a 2-fold difference for this species alone. Recent reports have shown that several plant compounds can bias DNA content estimates obtained by commonly used methods. The purpose of this research was to examine the standardization procedures used for DNA content determinations with flow cytometry as applied to Gossypium, and generate revised DNA content estimates for all available Gossypium species using best-standard practices.
Methods Flow cytometry was used to measure fluorescence of isolated Gossypium nuclei stained with propidium iodide. Fluorescence values were converted to DNA content estimates based on the nuclear fluorescence of standard genotypes of barley, corn and rice. Various combinations of nuclei preparations relative to the standards were evaluated for their influence on the estimates.
Key Results Both external standardization and internal standardization with Oryza sativa IR36 yielded statistically similar DNA content estimates for Gossypium. Internal standardization with Hordeum vulgare Sultan resulted in a high estimate of DNA content. Nuclear DNA content estimates were generated for 37 Gossypium species using external standardization. Estimates of ancestral genome sizes reveal that both increases and decreases in nuclear DNA content have occurred. Variation in intraspecific and intragenomic DNA content was low, and the allopolyploid AD-genome size was nearly the additive of its progenitor genomes.
Conclusions Due to unknown factors, internal standardization with H. vulgare Sultan may not be appropriate for DNA content determinations of Gossypium. The current DNA content estimates support accepted cytogenetic divisions of the genus. Gossypium is a genus that exhibits genome constancy both through speciation within genomic groups and allopolyploidization.
Key words: DNA content, Gossypium, flow cytometry, standardization, genome conservation, cytosolic interference, propidium iodide
| INTRODUCTION |
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Gossypium comprises approx. 50 species (Fryxell, 1992
At present, estimates of nuclear DNA content have been reported for 24 Gossypium species representing eight of the nine genomic groups (Edwards et al., 1974
; Kadir, 1976
; Walbot and Dure, 1976
; Edwards and Mirza, 1979
; Bennett et al., 1982
; Michaelson et al., 1991
; Gomez et al., 1993
; Bennett et al., 1997
; Wendel et al., 2002
). Edwards et al. (1974)
and Kadir (1976)
examined DNA content on a genus-wide scale, while most of the other authors reported values only for G. hirsutum. Reports of DNA content estimates for G. hirsutum using various techniques (i.e. flow cytometry, Feulgen microspectrophotometry, reassociation kinetics) cover a 25-year period. Variability in estimates among these reports makes it difficult to determine which values are most accurate. For example, estimates of the 2C nuclear DNA content of G. hirsutum range from 3·2 pg (Walbot and Dure, 1976
) to 6·45 pg (Bennett et al., 1982
), a 2-fold difference for the same species. Variation in intraspecific DNA content of this magnitude has been reported in other species (e.g. Helianthus annus; Sims and Price, 1985
), but recent studies (Price et al., 2000
; Noroit et al., 2000
) cast doubt on the validity of these conclusions due to the presence of compounds that affect the fluorescence of propidium iodide, a dye commonly used to quantify DNA content. Here, an attempt is made to resolve the ambiguities concerning the DNA content of G. hirsutum through an evaluation of standardization procedures for determining DNA content by flow cytometry. Based on the standardized method, the 2C nuclear DNA contents of 37 Gossypium species are reported.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plant materials
Thirty-seven Gossypium species (Table 1) representing all the recognized genome divisions within the genus were included in the assessments. Most Gossypium seeds were from the germplasm collection maintained by the Cotton Biotechnology and Germplasm Laboratory at the University of Arkansas. When possible, original seeds collected from wild populations were analysed, but for old and otherwise nonviable seed, seed increase stocks were used. Seeds of Gossypium species not on hand and of Oryza sativa IR36, Zea mays W64A and Hordeum vulgare Sultan, recommended standard reference species for estimating DNA content (Price and Johnston, 1996
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Isolation and staining of nuclei
Seeds were germinated in the dark on 0·7 % phytoagar (Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA) in sealed Petri plates at 28 °C. Seeds with low germination were surface sterilized (20 % commercial bleach, 1 drop Tween 20, for 20 min) and placed on media with supplemental nutrients (SGM; Stewart and Hsu, 1977
Evaluation of standardization procedures
Etiolated hypocotyl and cotyledon tissue from G. hirsutum DP 491 was processed separately with two internal standards and alone to evaluate which standardization method was most reliable. Cotton tissue was divided into three 50-mg sub-samples. Prior to chopping and nuclei isolation, two of the sub-samples were combined separately with a 50-mg sub-sample of barley or 35-mg sub-sample of rice. The mixtures were chopped, incubated 1 h at 4 °C, and analysed for DNA content using the respective internal standard. The remaining cotton sub-sample and reference species sub-samples were chopped alone, incubated 1 h at 4 °C, and analysed for DNA content by reference to a standard curve generated from the external standard reference species (rice, corn and barley; Fig. 1).
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Additionally, a cytoplasmic-switch experiment was performed to determine which species, if any, contributed compounds that altered PI fluorescence. Cotton, barley and rice were chopped alone, divided into sub-samples as described above, and nuclei were isolated by centrifugation. The cytoplasmic fractions of all the species were recovered, and the nuclei of each species suspended in the cytoplasm of another and incubated for 1 h at 4 °C. As a control, a sub-sample of nuclei of each species was incubated in buffer only. PI-induced fluorescence was then measured via flow cytometry, and DNA content was calculated from the pseudo-internal or external standards.
2C DNA content measurement
PI-stained nuclei were analysed for DNA content with a FACsort flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry System, San Jose, CA, USA). The three standard species recommended by Price and Johnston (1996)
, Oryza sativa IR36 (2C = 1·01 pg), Zea mays W64A (2C = 5·47 pg) and Hordeum vulgare Sultan (2C = 11·12 pg), were used to correlate fluorescence values to DNA content. Nuclei prepared from these three species were included with each group of test samples. The mean fluorescence of the G0/G1 peak for each standard was determined after analysis of the data collected by CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry System, San Jose, CA, USA). These values were plotted, and a regression equation was calculated each day for use in estimation of the DNA content of the experimental samples (Fig. 1). Two samples of each standard were measured in random order during analysis as a control for instrument drift.
Statistical analyses of data
In all experiments, the fluorescence of at least 1000 G1-phase nuclei was measured. For the standardization experiments, eight independent replicates, measured in two groups of four on different days, were analysed for each processing method. Four replicates of most Gossypium species were analysed to obtain an estimation of their DNA content; however, for a few species with limited seed availability, less than four replicates were analysed. Mean 2C DNA-content values were generated as described above, and data are reported as mean 2C DNA mass in picograms (±s.e.). Means were separated with the Student's t-test (
= 0·05) (JMP 5·0·1, Academic Version; SAS Institute). Ancestral genome sizes for seven diploid genomes (AG) were estimated with the phylogenetic least squares method in Compare version 4·4 (Martins, 2003
) based on phylogenetic positions derived previously (Cronn et al., 2002
).
| RESULTS |
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Effect of tissue source on preparation of nuclei
Variation in estimated DNA content of nuclei due to developmental stage and tissue type from which the nuclei were obtained was determined for G. hirsutum DP 491 using external standards. The DNA content for etiolated hypocotyl/cotyledon tissue was not significantly different from that of mature leaves (data not shown). The use of etiolated tissue for determination of DNA content in this study was advantageous for many of the Gossypium species, as it was difficult to obtain clean preparations of nuclei from mature leaf tissue.
Effect of various internal/external standard combinations
When G. hirsutum DP491 tissue was co-processed with the barley reference, a non-significant 0·5 % decrease in the mean fluorescence of the barley G1 peak was observed; however, for cotton a statistically significant (
= 0·05) 7·5 % increase in the mean fluorescence of the G1 peak was observed (Fig. 2). When cotton tissue was co-processed with rice the mean fluorescence of the G1 peaks of these two species increased 0·8 % and 10·8 %, respectively. The difference in PI fluorescence resulted in estimated DNA content values for cotton of 4·97 pg (±0·07; rice co-processed), 5·13 pg (±0·04; external standard curve) or 5·88 pg (±0·009; barley co-processed).
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When the plant tissues were processed alone and then mixed with the cytoplasmic fractions of another species, a different effect was observed for the mean fluorescence of the barley G1 nuclei. The mean fluorescence of the G1-peak of cotton was increased 5·25 % by barley cytoplasm, whereas, the mean fluorescence of the G1 peak for barley increased 2·13 % when incubated with cotton cytoplasm. Both values were statistically significant (
= 0·05). The fluorescence values of the cotton/rice cytoplasm-switch combinations increased 1·4 % for cotton and 4·5 % for rice. The DNA content of cotton calculated from pseudo-internal or external standards was 4·93 pg (±0·05; rice cytoplasm), 5·05 pg (±0·03; external standard curve) and 5·79 pg (±0·06; barley cytoplasm). Comparison of the DNA content values from both experiments revealed no significant differences when tissues were co-processed or cytoplasmic fractions were switched. However, in both experiments significant differences occurred that were related to the processing method. The mean 2C DNA content of cotton processed alone (external standardization) was 5·09 pg (±0·03). Cotton co-processed with rice as an internal standard had a mean 2C DNA content of 4·97 pg (±0·06), which was not significantly different from cotton processed alone. The remainder of the DNA values differed significantly from cotton processed alone, with barley/cotton combinations being the most extreme in this regard. The average values of these data are presented in Table 2.
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2C DNA content
The nuclear DNA contents of 37 Gossypium species in nine genome groups are listed in Table 1. The K genome is the largest genome in the genus with a mean 2C DNA content of 5·26 pg for the nine species measured in this study. The smallest genome in the genus is the D genome with a mean 2C DNA content of 1·81 pg. Means comparison (
= 0·05) yielded significant differences among all of the genomic groups, with the exception of the B (2C = 2·76 pg) and the F (2C = 2·68 pg) genomes.
To assess the fate of nuclear DNA in the AD genome following polyploidization, five replicate measurements were made of the DNA contents of the species thought to be most closely related to the progenitors of the AD genome, namely G. herbaceum spp. africanum (A genome) and G. raimondii (D genome) (Wendel and Cronn, 2002
). The mean estimated values for the 2C DNA contents of the two species are 3·41 pg and 1·80 pg, respectively.
The DNA content for multiple accessions of both G. hirsutum and G. arboreum were also determined (Table 1). Intraspecific variation in DNA content was low for both species. A 6·04 % difference in DNA content between the smallest and the largest accession values was observed within the six accessions of G. hirsutum (4·92 pg ± 0·05) measured. The variation in DNA content among five accessions of G. arboreum (3·50 pg ± 0·04) was 4·08 %.
Ancestral DNA content estimates (±s.e.) derived from measured genome sizes are reported in Fig. 3. The DNA content of the hypothetical basal member of the genus was estimated at 2·86 pg (±1·44). Similar to trends observed in the larger cotton tribe (Wendel et al., 2002
), both increasing and decreasing DNA content values were predicted along the lineages leading to extant genomes.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Changes in PI fluorescence
Gossipium hirsutum DP491, H. vulgare Sultan and O. sativa IR36 appear to contain compounds that enhance PI fluorescence to differing degrees. Similar PI fluorescence anomalies were observed in Coffea sp. (Noriot et al., 2000
Barley and DNA content determinations for Gossypium
To investigate further the discrepancies between published DNA content values and the present results, nine determinations for G. hirsutum derived via Feulgen microspectrophotometry or flow cytometry were examined (Table 3). The mean 2C DNA content of these values is 5·64 pg. Of the three standardization methods tested, only when barley was used as an internal standard were values obtained (average of 5·88 pg) that were close to the mean figure. From the present results, the 2C DNA content of cotton based on rice as an internal standard, or based on an external three-species standard curve, was 4·97 pg and 5·09 pg, respectively. When the KEW database (http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/cval/database1.html) values are parsed by method of standardization, the six values derived with barley as an internal standard have a mean 2C DNA content of 5·98 pg, in close agreement to the present value from internal barley standardization. However, corn (5·47 pg 2C) was used as an external standard in this study, and G. hirsutum fluorescence values were always lower than that of corn, indicating that cotton had a smaller genome size (Fig. 1). The presence of a PI fluorescence inhibitor in cotton could account for this discrepancy, but the data indicate that compounds in cotton enhance, rather than inhibit, PI fluorescence. Additionally, Arumuganathan and Earle (1991)
reported a DNA content value of 4·9 pg for G. hirsutum using chicken red blood cells (CRBC) as an internal standard, a value that closely agrees with the authors' values based on rice-internal and -external standardization. In the same study (Arumuganathan and Earle, 1991
), it was also reported that the DNA content of G. hirsutum is 4·4 pg. Although not indicated in the study, this discrepancy may be explained by varietal differences, which is consistent, in relative terms, to the intraspecific variation reported by Gomez et al. (1993)
. Based on available data, it is concluded that estimation of DNA content based on rice as an internal standard, or on an external standard curve derived from three reference species, is more accurate than barley internal standardization alone. Due to unknown factors, internal standardization with H. vulgare Sultan may not be appropriate for DNA content determination in Gossypium spp.
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External standardization
Rice as an internal standard or external standardization yielded statistically similar DNA content determinations (Table 2), but the mean values differed by approx. 0·1 pg. It was then necessary for us to make a judgment as to which values were most accurate. It should be emphasized that, in the authors' view, either method would be sufficiently accurate, but in the present study external standardization for the DNA content determinations were used. Price et al. (2000)
2C DNA content
The estimated values of DNA content within Gossypium strongly support the previous cytogenetic divisions proposed for the genus (Endrizzi et al., 1985
). A 3·3-fold difference in DNA content was observed between G. thurberi (D genome, 1·72 pg ± 0·02 s.e.) and G. nobile (K genome, 5·68 pg ± 0·15 s.e.), the smallest and largest DNA values for species within the genus, respectively. This range of DNA content variation is consistent with the ranges reported for other angiosperms (Bennett et al., 1982
). However, within species and genomic groups surprising consistency was observed. The mean percentage variation within species (5·06 %) was similar to the mean variation (6·02 %) seen within the nine genomic groups. These variations may reflect changes in the portions of the genome composed of repetitive DNA or changes in the single-copy fraction of the genome. In either case, within species or genomic groups of Gossypium, DNA content is largely static. This observation suggests that speciation within the genomic groups of the genus is not accompanied by large changes in genome size, and a relatively small portion of the genome, then, must govern the major phenotypic differences observed within and between species in a genomic group.
Similar intraspecific genome consistency has been reported in Allium cepa (Bennett et al., 2000
), H. vulgare, Vicia faba (Bennett and Smith, 1976
), Pisum sativum (Greilhuber and Ebert, 1994
) and Glycine max (Greilhuber and Obermayer, 1997
). Gossypium, thus, is another in the group of angiosperms that tend to maintain its nuclear DNA content. Bennett et al. (2000)
suggested that genetic mechanisms must exist for such genome constancy to be maintained. Based on the data for Gossypium, this hypothesis is clearly applicable not only within species but also within genomic groups. Furthermore, the inactivation of such a mechanism to control genome size in Gossypium would be a rare event in that it could have occurred only four times during the evolution of the genus, resulting in four major phylogenetic lineages (reviewed in Wendel and Cronn, 2002
). As discussed below, allopolyploidization has acted within the genus to change size, but the mechanisms that produced the major lineages in the genus are independent of the genomic shock (McClintock, 1984
) often associated with allopolyploidization. Environmental factors, however, may have contributed to these divergences, as these lineages developed unique features that enabled survival in conditions that range from arid to mesic.
The AD genome is thought to have formed via a single hybridization/polyploidization event between ancestral A- and D-genome species some 1·5 million years ago (Senchina et al., 2003
). The sum of the mean 2C DNA contents of G. herbaceum ssp. africanum (3·41 pg) and G. raimondii (1·80 pg), the species thought to be most representative of the taxa involved in the polyploidization event, was not additive to the mean estimate reported for the AD genome, 5·21 pg vs. 4·91 pg. DNA loss between 5 % and 6 % appears to have occurred during the evolution of the tetraploid species. Previous reports stated that the AD genome exhibited complete additivity with respect to its progenitor genomes (Wendel et al., 2002
). Ambiguity concerning the DNA content of G. hirsutum may have led to this belief, but the present results indicate that an amended view of near complete additivity is more appropriate. However, caution should be used when interpreting these data, as the species chosen as representative of the original progenitors may themselves differ by that amount from the true progenitors, or have lost or gained DNA since the initial hybridization event. Furthermore, simple intraspecific DNA content could account for this difference, as a 56 % variation in DNA content is common within the genus. Because of the impossibility of examining the taxa involved in the hybridization event, no absolute conclusion can be reached, but it is clear that allopolyploidization did not greatly affect genome size within the AD genome. Similar conservation of DNA content (15 % loss) following polyploidization has been reported for Hordeum polyploids (Jakob et al., 2004
).
Gossipium gossypioides is a cotton species with a complex evolutionary history, with evidence of both nuclear and cytoplasmic introgressions from African (A-, F-, B- or E-genome) and D-genome species, respectively (Cronn et al., 2003
). In light of the observation of genome constancy during allopolyploidization within Gossypium, it is in contrast to note that the nuclear DNA content of G. gossypioides (1·72 pg) is not additive to a putative D-genome x African-genome hybrid (approx. 2·4 pg). Eight low-copy nuclear genes resolved G. gossypioides as the basal member of the D genome (Cronn et al., 2003
). The observation would support the hypothesis that the D-genome x African-genome hybridization occurred before the divergence of the D genome, and thus this event and the resulting loss of nuclear DNA set the genome size for the taxon. However, different data sets (ITS, cpDNA) place G. gossypioides in different phylogenetic positions within the phylogenetic clades, further complicating the matter. More work is needed to fully understand the relationship between the nuclear DNA content of G. gossypioides and the cryptic African-genome hybridization event.
The largest variation (13·1 %) in DNA content in Gossypium was observed within the K genome. Interestingly, the values tend to correspond to plant growth habit. Prostrate and ascending plant types have a lower DNA content, while the erect plant types have a higher DNA content (Table 1). The results are supported by the phylogenetic separation of prostrate and erect plant types within the K genome (Seelanan et al., 1999
). Additionally, the D genome has over 11 % variation in DNA content that is reflected to some degree by the six taxonomic subsections comprising the genomic group. With even higher variation in DNA content, perhaps the K genome is deserving of additional attention to its phylogeny. The previously reported (Wendel and Cronn, 2002
) estimate of 7·0 pg for the 2C K-genome mass was based on comparative chromosome observations (J. McD. Stewart, University of Arkansas, unpubl. res.) of K- and AD-genome species based on an assumed value of approx. 6 pg for the AD genome and is considerably higher than the 5·26 pg (2C) we obtained by direct measurement.
DNA content values for 20 Gossypium species measured by Feulgen microspectrophotometry (Kadir, 1976
) were compared with those reported in this study (Fig. 4). It should be noted that Kadir reported his results as nuclear fluorescence values relative to values obtained from a standard G. arboreum. Bennett et al. (1982)
converted the G. arboreum fluorescence values reported by Kadir (1976)
into picograms using H. vulgare Sultan as an internal standard, and then back-calculated picogram values for the remainder of the species values. The resulting DNA content values are greater, by an average of 27 %, than those reported in this study for the same species. When the values from the study of Kadir (1976)
were recalculated using the mean DNA content measured for G. arboreum in the present study (3·5 pg; see Table 1), the species DNA content values based on Feulgen microspectrophotometry agree closely with those reported in the present study derived from flow cytometry.
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It was concluded that external standardization produced the most reliable DNA content estimates for Gossypium species. Internal standardization with O. sativa IR36 may also yield acceptable results. Hordeum vulgare Sultan, however, appeared to be unsuitable as an internal standard for Gossypium as the DNA content estimates produced by this method were high. The DNA content values for the 37 Gossypium species provide additional support for previous cytogenetic divisions of the genus (Endrizzi et al., 1985
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Dr Gisela Erf for assistance and training on the use of the flow cytometer. This research was funded in part by a grant from Cotton Inc., which is gratefully acknowledged.
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