AOBPreview originally published online on February 15, 2006
Annals of Botany 2006 97(5):715-722; doi:10.1093/aob/mcl030
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Chromosomal Localization of 5S and 18S rDNA in Five Species of Subgenus Strobus and their Implications for Genome Evolution of Pinus
1 Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 100093 Beijing, China and 2 Key Laboratory of Resource Biology and Biotechnology in Western China, Northwest University, Ministry of Education, 710069 Xi'an, China
* For correspondence. E-mail Xiao-Ru.Wang{at}niwl.se
Received: 24 October 2005 Returned for revision: 20 November 2005 Accepted: 5 January 2006 Published electronically: 15 February 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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Background and Aims Studying the genome structure of pines has been hindered by their large genomes and uniform karyotypes. Consequently our understanding of the genome organization and evolutionary changes in different groups of pines is extremely limited. However, techniques are now available that can surmount these difficulties. The purpose of this study was to exploit some of these techniques to characterize the genome differentiation between the two subgenera of Pinus: Pinus and Strobus.
Methods Double-probe fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) was used to localize the 5S and 18S rDNA loci on chromosomes of five species from the subgenus Strobus: P. bungeana, P. koraiensis, P. armandii, P. wallichiana and P. strobus.
Key Results The rDNA FISH pattern varied considerably among the five species, with P. bungeana being the most distinct. By comparing the results obtained with those of previous rDNA FISH studies of members of the subgenus Pinus, several general features of rDNA loci distribution in the genus Pinus can be discerned: (a) species of subgenus Strobus generally have more rDNA loci than species of subgenus Pinus, correlating with their larger genomes in the subgenus Strobus; (b) there is a clear differentiation in 5S and 18S rDNA loci linkage patterns between the two subgenera; (c) variations in the rDNA FISH pattern correlate with phylogenetic relationships among species within the subgenus; (d) P. bungeana has fewer 18S rDNA sites than other pines investigated to date, but they give intense signals, and may reflect the primary distribution of the 18S25S rDNA loci in the genus.
Conclusions The stable differentiation in rDNA FISH pattern between the subgenera suggests that chromosomal rearrangements played a role in the splitting of the two subgenera, and transpositional events rather than major structural changes are likely responsible for the variable rDNA distribution patterns among species of the same subgenus with conserved karyotypes.
Key words: 5S and 18S rDNA, FISH, karyotype, Pinus, subgenus Strobus
| INTRODUCTION |
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The genus Pinus comprises more than 100 species, which are widely distributed in the northern hemisphere (Mirov, 1967
The genome size of pines has been measured as the amount of DNA in their haploid genomes (C values) (Wakamiya et al., 1993
; Hall et al., 2000
; Joyner et al., 2001
; Grotkopp et al., 2004
). Investigations have revealed that members of the subgenus Strobus generally have larger genomes (27·3637·68 pg C1) than those in the subgenus Pinus (19·9435·26 pg C1). This variation has been difficult to relate to the karyotypic characters of pines in a phylogenetic framework, because pines show remarkable uniformity in karyotype. All the Pinus species have the same chromosome number, 2n = 24, composed of 11 pairs of metacentric chromosomes of similar length and a short heterobrachial chromosome (Pederick, 1970
; Saylor, 1972
, 1983
). Fluorescent banding using the fluorochromes chromomycin A (CMA) and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) was applied to some Pinus species and was useful for chromosome identification (Hizume et al., 1983
, 1989
, 1990
). However, investigations on the genome organization and structural rearrangements in pines have been limited due to the lack of resolution in the karyotypes. For these applications, in situ hybridization (ISH) or fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) using an rDNA probe has proved to be an excellent tool in pines (Hizume et al., 1992
, 2002
; Lubaretz et al., 1996
; Jacobs et al., 2000
; Liu et al., 2003
).
To date, the chromosomal localization of 18S25S rDNA loci has been reported for 15 Pinus species, including P. elliotii (Doudrick et al., 1995
), P. sylvestris (Karvonen et al., 1993
; Lubaretz et al., 1996
; Hizume et al., 2002
), P. radiata (Gorman et al., 1992
; Jacobs et al., 2000
), P. taeda (Jacobs et al., 2000
), P. densiflora, P. thunbergii (Hizume et al., 1992
; 2002
), P. nigra (Hizume et al., 2002
), P. tabuliformis, P. yunanensis, P. densata, P. massoniana, P. merkusii (Liu et al., 2003
), P. resinosa, P. banksiana and P. strobus (Nkongolo et al., 2004
). Among these pines, only P. strobus belongs to the subgenus Strobus, the 14 other pines are all from the subgenus Pinus. Thus, there is a clear need to find out more about the localization of rDNA loci in subgenus Strobus to generalize the patterns of rDNA loci distribution in this subgenus and the differentiation between the two subgenera.
In the present study, the 5S and 18S rDNA loci localization patterns in five species (P. bungeana, P. koraiensis, P. armandii, P. wallichiana and P. strobus) of subgenus Strobus are investigated using DNA probes for the 5S rDNA and 18S rDNA simultaneously to address the following questions: (a) Do the number and location of rDNA loci vary between the two subgenera? (b) Does the difference in rDNA loci number correlate with difference in genome sizes between the two subgenera? (c) Can the variations in FISH patterns be explained within a phylogenetic framework of Pinus?
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Chromosome slide preparation
Five species representing three subsections of subgenus Strobus were selected for this study (Table 1). Seeds of each species were collected from natural stands or artificial plantations and germinated in Petri dishes on moist filter paper at room temperature. The primary root tips, grown to a length of 11·5 cm, were excised and pretreated with 0·05 % colchicine for 24 h at 25 °C, fixed in Carnoy's fixative (ethanol : acetic acid, 3 : 1, v/v) for 24 h, and macerated with a mixture of 1 % Y-23 pectolyase (Yakult) and 2 % R-10 cellulase (Yakult) at 37 °C for 45 min. Metaphase chromosome spreads were prepared by conventional squashing.
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Probe preparation
Genomic DNA of P. bungeana was isolated from seed megagametophyte and used as a template for PCR amplification. 18S rDNA sequence was amplified with the primers 5'-CTAGAGCTAATACGTGCAAC-3' and 5'-GATAAGGTTCAGTGGACTTC-3' (Troitsky et al., 1991
FISH
The chromosomal slides were treated with 100 µL RNase (100 µg mL1 in 2x SSC) at 37 °C for 1 h and then soaked twice for 5 min in 2x SSC. The chromosomes were then digested with proteinase K (1 µg mL1, Promega) at 37 °C for 10 min. The slides were dehydrated in a series of 70 %, 95 % and 100 % ethanol and then air-dried. A 20-µL hybridization solution, containing 10 % dextran sulfate, 50 % formamide, 10 ng µL1 of sheared salmon sperm DNA, 2 ng µL1 of denatured probes and 2x SSC, was added to each slide. The slides were placed in a moisture chamber, denatured at 85 °C for 13 min, then immediately placed in a hybridization oven and kept at 37 °C overnight for probe hybridization. The slides were then washed with 20 % formamide in 0·1x SSC at 42 °C for 10 min, followed by two washes with 2x SSC at 37 °C for 5 min, and 2x SSC at room temperature for 5 min. In-situ hybridization was repeated on three to five chromosome spreads for each species.
Before detection, the slides were soaked in detection buffer (5 % BSA, 100 mM TrisHCl pH 7·5, 150 mM NaCl, 0·1 % Triton X-100) at 37 °C for 30 min. The 18S rDNA signals were detected using anti-DIG-rhodamine (2 ng mL1; Roche) and 5S rDNA signals were detected using avidinFITC (2 µg mL1; Sigma, USA). The slides were counter-stained with 100 µL DAPI (2 µg mL1), and observed under a fluorescence microscope (DMRBE, Leica) at 100 x 10 magnification. The FISH images were captured by a cooled CCD colour chromatic camera (Spot Enhanced; Diagnostic Instruments Inc.).
Chromosome length measurement
The arm lengths of chromosomes in the CCD-captured images of ten cells from each of two or three chromosome spreads of each species were measured. The arm ratio was calculated, and the average values were used to construct an ideogram of the karyotype for each species. The chromosomes were assigned consecutively according to their lengths, with the longest being assigned as I and the shortest as XII. For chromosomes of equal length, the chromosome with the longest short arm was assigned first. As well as the length and arm ratios of the chromosomes, secondary constrictions and FISH patterns are also informative characters for karyotyping. The location of rDNA loci on each chromosome is shown on the ideograms. The mapped positions are not precise quantitative representations, although the relative distances of each rDNA site to the centromere and telomere were considered while constructing the ideogram.
| RESULTS |
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Clear, reproducible, unambiguous FISH signals from three to five FISH replicates of each species were registered. Weak signals in centromeric regions were not analysed. Examples of the 18S and 5S rDNA FISH pattern obtained for each species are shown in Fig. 1 and an ideogram of the karyotypes is presented in Fig. 2. The karyotype features of the five pine species are similar to those reported by Saylor (1983)
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In P. bungeana (Figs 1A and 2A), four pairs of intense 18S rDNA site signals were detected in the interstitial regions of the short arms of chromosomes VI, VIII, XI and XII. Two pairs of 5S rDNA sites were detected, one localized on the short arm of chromosome V and the other together with an 18S rDNA site on the short arm of chromosome XI.
In P. koraiensis, nine pairs of 18S rDNA sites were detected on nine pairs of chromosomes, eight on the interstitial regions of the short arms of chromosomes I, II, IV, V, VIII, IX, X and XI and one on the long arm of chromosome XII. Four pairs of 5S rDNA sites were detected: one on the short arm of chromosome III, while the remaining three were localized with 18S rDNA sites on the short arms of chromosomes I, V and XI (Figs 1B and 2B).
In P. armandii, ten pairs of 18S rDNA and three pairs of 5S rDNA sites were detected. Seven pairs of 18S rDNA sites were localized in the interstitial regions of the short arms of chromosomes II, IV, V, VI, VIII, X and XI, while the other three were on the long arms of chromosomes IX, XI and XII. A notable feature was that both arms of chromosome XI hosted an 18S rDNA site. Two 5S rDNA sites were detected close to the 18S rDNA sites on the distal regions of the short arms of chromosomes X and XI, respectively. Another 5S rDNA site was situated alone on the short arm of chromosome I (Figs 1C and 2C).
In P. wallichiana, ten pairs of 18S rDNA and two pairs of 5S rDNA sites were detected. Similar to the rDNA distribution in P. armandii, seven pairs of 18S rDNA were found in the interstitial regions of the short arms of chromosomes II, IV, V, VI, VIII, X and XI and three pairs on the long arms of chromosomes IX, XI and XII. In addition, as in P. armandii, chromosome XI of P. wallichiana also hosted an 18S rDNA site on each of its arms and a 5S rDNA site in the distal region of the short arm. The other 5S rDNA site was found on the short arm of chromosome I (Figs 1D and 2D).
In P. strobus, nine pairs of 18S rDNA and two pairs of 5S rDNA sites were detected. Eight pairs of 18S rDNA sites were found in the interstitial regions of the short arms of chromosomes II, III, IV, V, VI, IX, X and XI and one on the long arm of chromosome XII. One 5S rDNA site was found close to the 18S rDNA site on the short arm of chromosome XI, and the other on chromosome I (Figs 1E and 2E).
In four of the species examined, except for P. bungeana, rDNA sites were detected on ten of the 12 chromosome pairs. Most of the 18S rDNA sites gave clear signals and were positioned in the interstitial regions corresponding to secondary constrictions. No clear, unambiguous 18S signals were observed at the centromere in any case, although weak signals were detected in centromeric regions of two or three pairs of chromosomes in each species. All the 5S rDNA sites were detected at distal positions. Based on the 5S and 18S rDNA distribution patterns and chromosomal morphology, chromosomes XI and XII can be unambiguously identified in all five species. Chromosome XI hosted a 5S and an 18S rDNA site on its short arm in all five species, and a second 18S rDNA site was hosted on the opposite arm of this chromosome in P. wallichiana and P. armandii. The rDNA FISH pattern of P. bungeana differed markedly from that of the other four species, since it contains only four pairs of 18S rDNA sites. The detected signal strength of these sites, however, was noticeably more intense than in the other four pines.
| DISCUSSION |
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Genome research in Pinus has not progressed as rapidly as it has in model plants such as Oriza (Goff et al., 2002
This study reports, for the first time, the physical locations of 5S and 18S rDNA loci in species from the subgenus Strobus. Combined with the results of previous rDNA FISH analyses of members of the subgenus Pinus (Doudrick et al., 1995
; Hizume et al., 2002
; Liu et al., 2003
), several general features of rDNA loci distribution in the genus Pinus can be discerned. The number of 5S and 18S rDNA loci vary from one to four pairs, and from seven to ten pairs, respectively (Table 2), significantly more than the one or two pairs of 5S rDNA loci and one to five pairs of 18S25S rDNA loci in diploid angiosperms (Castilho and Heslop-Harrison, 1995
; Linares et al., 1996
; de Melo and Guerra, 2003
; Vaio et al., 2005
). The difference is, presumably, partly related to the evolutionary divergence between angiosperm and gymnosperm genomes, and partly to the much larger genomes of gymnosperms (Leitch et al., 2005
). Pines have large genomes, with estimates of approx. 1010 bp for the haploid genome (Ohri and Khoshoo, 1986
; Wakamiya et al., 1993
; Murray, 1998
; Elsik and Williams, 2000
). These huge genomes are largely (approx. 90 %) composed of repetitive DNA, together with many high-copy retro-element families (Kamm et al., 1996
; Kossack and Kinlaw, 1999
; Elsik and Williams, 2000
). 18S25S rDNA is one of the major components of the repetitive DNA in the genome (Bobola et al., 1992
). Thus, it is not surprising to discover a high number of rDNA sites in Pinus.
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Within the genus, there is a tendency for the genomes to be larger in subgenus Strobus than in subgenus Pinus (Hall et al., 2000
Double-rDNA FISH facilitates visualization of the relative positions of the two classes of rDNA loci on chromosomes. In subgenus Pinus, all the 5S sites are situated on chromosomes that contain one 18S25S site. The two rDNA sites are either situated on the same arm, with the 5S site in the interstitial region and the 18S25S site toward the terminal region, or on different arms of the same chromosome (Liu et al., 2003
). However, in subgenus Strobus the relative positions of the two rDNA sites examined were reversed, with the 5S site toward the terminal region and the 18S site toward the interstitial region. In addition, one 5S site in subgenus Strobus was observed on a chromosome with no 18S25S rDNA site. Among the pines that have been examined by double-rDNA FISH, the 5S and 18S25S rDNA loci linkage pattern seems to be a stable character for each subgenus. Such a stable differentiation in rDNA distribution patterns between the subgenera is more likely caused by chromosome inversion and/or translocation, suggesting that chromosomal rearrangements played a role in the splitting of the two subgenera.
The variations in rDNA distribution have phylogenetic implications, since the closeness of taxa is correlated to the similarity of their rDNA FISH patterns (Hizume et al., 2002
; Liu et al., 2003
). Among the species of subgenus Strobus examined here, the 18S rDNA site patterns of the two Asian species of subsection Strobi, P. armandii and P. wallichiana, are most similar, while the North American P. strobus, which is in the same subsection, diverges from them less in this respect than P. koraiensis of subsection Cembrae (Fig. 2). These relationships agree well with the rDNA- and chloroplast DNA-based phylogeny (Liston et al., 1999
; Wang et al., 1999
). The most unique rDNA pattern was found in P. bungeana. It showed the fewest 18S rDNA sites, but the signal strength of these sites was noticeably more intense than those of other pines, indicating that high copy numbers of the 18S25S rDNA repeats are present within each site. These sites may represent the primary sites of 18S25S rDNA before some of them moved out and became dispersed among more chromosomal sites in the speciation of pines. Molecular phylogeny supports a close-to-basal position for P. bungeana in subgenus Strobus (Liston et al., 1999
; Wang et al., 1999
). It would be interesting to examine P. gerardiana, from the same subsection as P. bungeana, and pines of the subsection Balfourianae (which lies at the basal position of the subgenus Strobus) to test the hypothesis that the condensed pattern of 18S25S rDNA sites found in P. bungeana reflects the primary distribution of these loci in the Pinus genome. Variations in rDNA FISH pattern among angiosperms of the same ploidy level have been attributed to chromosomal rearrangements, transpositional events and gene silencing (Moscone et al., 1999
; de Melo and Guerra, 2003
; Marcon et al., 2005
) The structural similarity among the karyotypes of pines within each subgenus suggest that major chromosomal structural rearrangments (e.g. translocation/inversion) are not frequent among species of the same subgenus. Mechanisms such as transposition of rDNA and amplification of cryptic minor rDNA sites by unequal crossover have been proposed for the dispersed genomic organization of rDNA in angiosperms and fungi (Drouin and de Sá, 1995
; Dubcovsky and Dvo
ák, 1995
; Rooney and Ward, 2005
). Such mechanisms are likely to be involved in the origin of the variation in the rDNA loci distribution among closely related Pinus species.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Dr Bailian Li, North Carolina State University, for seeds of P. strobus, and Dr Alfred E. Szmidt, Kyushu University, for critically reading the manuscript and making valuable comments on it. This study was supported by grants from the Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC 30325006, 30121003).
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