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* Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Center (USDA-ARS) Western Regional Research Center, Albany, California 94710-1105
Department of Plant Pathology, Wheat Genetics Resource Center, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-5502
Department of Agronomy and Range Science, University of California, Davis, California 95616
¶ Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1170
& Department of Agronomy, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211
** USDA-ARS Plant Genetics Research Unit, Department of Agronomy, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211

Department of Plant Breeding, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853

Department of Plant Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota 58105

Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-6420
¶¶ Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California 92521
&& Genetic Resources Conservation Program, University of California, Davis, California 95616
5 Corresponding author: Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, 411 Borlaug Hall, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108.
E-mail: ander319{at}umn.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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Due to its extremely large genome size (
16,000 Mb), whole-genome sequencing is not currently feasible for gene discovery and genome evolution analysis in hexaploid wheat. Expressed sequence tags (ESTs) are segments of sequences from cDNA clones that correspond to mRNA (ADAMS et al. 1991). The EST sequencing approach targets sequencing of the expressed portions of the genome and is particularly useful for gene discovery and major genomics studies in large-genome species. ESTs can be isolated from a broad range of libraries to maximize the number of genes identified. As of January 2004, 577,538 wheat ESTs were cataloged in the public database at NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/dbEST/dbEST_summary.html). Large-scale EST mapping provides valuable insights into the structure and evolution of genomes. EST mapping studies can be used to assess gene density and distribution, duplication, structural rearrangements, colinearity with related species, and function through comparative genomics (AKHUNOV et al. 2003a; SORRELLS et al. 2003; QI et al. 2004).
The triplication of genomic content allows wheat to tolerate the loss of chromosomes, arms, and segments (SEARS 1954, 1966; SEARS and SEARS 1978; ENDO and GILL 1996). The use of nullisomic-tetrasomic, ditelosomic, and deletion lines missing successive terminal segments allows for the mapping of molecular markers to chromosomes, arms, and chromosome bins within arms. In recent years, aneuploids and deletion lines have been used extensively in mapping studies (ANDERSON et al. 1992; GILL et al. 1993, 1996a,b; DELANY et al. 1995; FARIS et al. 2000; QI and GILL 2001; SANDHU et al. 2001; WENG and LAZAR 2002; AKHUNOV et al. 2003a; QI et al. 2004). A high proportion of DNA fragments can be mapped within subchromosomal regions using deletion lines because intragenomic polymorphism is not required. Deletion bins along the chromosome arms have been defined as chromosome segments lying between the breakpoints of two deletion lines (ENDO and GILL 1996). A National Science Foundation-funded wheat EST project was undertaken with a goal of mapping 10,000 ESTs to chromosome bins in the wheat genome by Southern hybridization using nullisomic-tetrasomic, ditelosomic, and deletion lines. The chromosome karyotypes detailing breakpoints and chromosome bins for the cytogenetic stocks used in the wheat EST mapping project can be found online at http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/west/binmaps/.
The rice (Oryza sativa L.) genome sequence (GOFF et al. 2002; YU et al. 2002; http://rgp.dna.affrc.go.jp/cgi-bin/statusdb/irgsp-status.cgi; http://www.gramene.org/) provides a useful reference for comparative genomics in the cereals. The deletion mapping system of wheat provides a tool to examine colinearity with rice at the subchromosome level. SORRELLS et al. (2003) conducted a whole-genome comparative mapping study of wheat and rice using wheat EST and rice sequence data and found that BAC/PAC clones from one or a few rice chromosomes have homology to each wheat homoeologous chromosome group.
The group 2 chromosomes contain several genes of great agronomic importance, including the photoperiod response genes Ppd1, Ppd2, and Ppd3 (SCARTH and LAW 1983), numerous genes conferring resistance to leaf, stem, and stripe rust and to powdery mildew (MCINTOSH et al. 2003), the two semidwarfing genes Rht 7 (WORLAND et al. 1980) and Rht 8 (WORLAND and LAW 1986), the gametocidal genes Gc1-B1a and Gc1-B1b (TSUJIMOTO and TSUNEWAKI 1988), and a QTL involved in resistance to preharvest sprouting (ANDERSON et al. 1993).
The objectives of this study were to (1) construct a high-density EST chromosome bin map of wheat homoeologous group 2 chromosomes, (2) analyze the distribution of EST loci among the genomes and along the chromosome arms, (3) construct a consensus map of group 2, (4) investigate synteny among the group 2 chromosomes, (5) examine patterns of duplication, and (6) assess the colinearity of ESTs mapped on the group 2 consensus map with the rice genome sequence.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Construction of group 2 consensus EST map:
ESTs mapped to bins in two or three group 2 chromosomes were assigned to 14 consensus bins, designated CS, 1S, 2S, 3S, 4S, 5S, and 6S on the short arm and CL, 1L, 2L, 3L, 4L, 5L, and 6L on the long arm from the centromere to the telomere (Figure 2; see also supplemental online materials at http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/pubs/2004/Genetics/). Deletion bins were ordered for each homoeologous group 2 chromosome, and ESTs were grouped according to their bin locations in each genome. The consensus bins were defined by ESTs sharing a common mapping pattern, on the basis of restriction fragments from the different genomes being located in syntenous bins. For example, consensus bin CS was defined by ESTs mapped to chromosome deletion bins C-2AS5-0.78, C-2BS1-0.53, and C-2DS1-0.33, while neighboring consensus bin 1S was defined by ESTs mapped to chromosome deletion bins C-2AS5-0.78, C-2BS1-0.53, and 2DS1-0.33-0.47. Some ESTs with loci in only two group 2 chromosomes were mapped to combined consensus bins if the map locations of the loci spanned more than one consensus bin. For example, an EST having mapped loci in chromosome bins C-2AS5-0.78 and C-2BS1-0.53, but no map location for chromosome 2D, could map to consensus bins CS, 1S, or 2S and was therefore assigned to the combined bin CS-2S. However, an EST with mapped loci in chromosome bins C-2BS1-0.53 and C-2DS1-0.33, but no 2A location, could still be assigned to bin CS, because the map locations in 2B and 2D are entirely contained within the bin C-2AS5-0.78. Because all consensus bins, except 4S, were bounded by the superimposed fraction lengths of the chromosome deletion bins onto a single consensus group 2 chromosome (Figure 2), consensus bin fraction lengths were estimated by the superimposed breakpoints of the deletion bins among the three group 2 chromosomes. Distribution of EST loci along the consensus map was assessed by chi-square analysis using the subset of loci mapped to specific consensus bins and generated from ESTs having all restriction fragments mapped to reduce bias due to unmapped fragments. The expected density of EST loci for each consensus bin was calculated by multiplying the total number of loci assigned to all consensus bins by the proportional length of the bin.
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Duplications:
ESTs with mapped loci in two different bins within one chromosome were considered interbin duplication events. These were assigned to the consensus map if at least two chromosomes had loci in syntenous bins. ESTs with a minimum of one group 2 locus and at least one locus mapping to a non-group 2 location were considered interchromosome duplication events. This analysis did not take into account differences in hybridization intensity among the restriction fragments. Among ESTs having at least one fragment mapped to a group 2 chromosome and at least one fragment mapped to another homoeologous group, the total number of loci for each non-group 2 bin throughout the hexaploid wheat genome was counted. Chi-square analysis was used to test the randomness of distribution of group 2 ESTs duplicated in the other homoeologous groups. The null hypothesis was a proportional distribution of duplicate EST loci among the other homoeologous groups, such that the number of duplicate loci would be based on the physical size of each chromosome group. Chi-square analysis was also used to test the randomness of the distribution of duplicates among non-group 2 chromosome bins. The null hypothesis was that the frequency of duplicate loci from group 2 in each bin would be equal to the total frequency of all loci mapped to that bin. The expected number of duplicate loci was calculated by multiplying the frequency of all loci occurring in that bin by the total number of duplicate loci mapping to non-group 2 chromosomes. Chi-square analysis was used to test the probability of finding the observed number of duplicate loci in each bin under the null hypothesis.
Wheat-rice comparisons:
The 552 ESTs assigned to the chromosome group 2 consensus map were used to analyze wheat-rice colinearity. The wheat EST nucleotide sequences were compared against the rice BAC/PAC DNA sequences using blastN at NCBI. The statistics of all the high-scoring pairs for any given query-subject pair were calculated and summarized, with the following cutoff parameters: E-value < 1E15, and 80% sequence identity over at least 100 bp. A binomial distribution was used to test the probability of finding the observed number of matches under the null hypothesis. The null hypothesis was no colinearity (i.e., the matches to rice would be randomly distributed throughout the rice genome). For each bin, the rice chromosome with the largest number of matches was identified. To test for the possibility of colinearity with more than one rice chromosome within a wheat bin, the binomial calculation was repeated for the rice chromosome with the second highest number of matches, after eliminating matches from the most colinear chromosome and then assuming an equal probability of matches occurring on each of the remaining 11 chromosomes.
| RESULTS |
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Group 2 consensus EST map:
Of the 1110 ESTs with mapped loci, 552 ESTs mapped to overlapping chromosome bins in two or three genomes were assigned to consensus bins with 225 ESTs located on the short arm and 327 on the long arm (see supplemental online materials at http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/pubs/2004/Genetics/). Of the 552 ESTs assigned to the consensus map, 376 were mapped to specific consensus bins, with 151 and 225 ESTs located to bins in the short and long arms, respectively. An additional 176 ESTs were mapped to larger, combined bins due to missing data in one of the homoeologous group 2 chromosomes, allowing only the interval, but not the specific bin, to be identified.
The consensus bin 4S was bounded by nonoverlapping fractions between chromosomes 2A and 2B. One EST, BF482723, with loci mapped to bins C-2AS5-0.78 and 2BS4-0.75-0.84, fit into the expected fraction (0.750.78); however, this EST had a highly complex banding pattern, with 14 total loci mapping to four different homoeologous groups and seven unmapped fragments. This EST was treated as an anomaly, while the 37 ESTs mapping to the syntenous bins of nonoverlapping fractions 2AS5-0.78-1.00, 2BS1-0.53-0.75, and 2DS5-0.47-1.00 defined consensus bin 4S. For the purpose of this study, the consensus bin 4S was defined by the 2BS1 0.75 breakpoint at its proximal end and the 2AS5 0.78 breakpoint at its distal end.
Chi-square analysis was performed using loci generated from ESTs having all restriction fragments mapped and assigned to specific consensus bins to analyze further the distribution of loci contained in smaller intervals (Figure 2, Table 3). Small interstitial consensus bins on the long arm (2L, estimated FL 0.49-0.50) and on the short arm (4S, estimated FL 0.75-0.78) had the highest EST density ratios of 34.6 and 7.8, respectively (P < 0.001). Bin 2L contained 32.4% of the long-arm EST loci mapped to consensus bins, yet constituted only
1% of the physical arm. This bin was flanked by bins 1L (estimated FL 0.36-0.49) and 3L (estimated FL 0.50-0.76), which contained significantly fewer than expected EST loci (P < 0.001). Bin 4S contained 28.3% of the EST loci mapping to short-arm consensus bins, yet accounted for <3% of the length of the arm. Adjacent bin 3S (estimated FL 0.53-0.75) was extremely sparse (P < 0.001) with a gene density ratio of only 0.10. The other neighboring consensus bin also had a low density ratio of 0.58, although there were only a small number of loci discovered. The most distal bins, 6S and 6L, had significantly higher than expected numbers of EST loci (P < 0.01 and P < 0.001, respectively). Consensus bin 4L, with estimated fraction length 0.760.85, was also highly EST rich (P < 0.001). Both centromeric consensus bins CS and CL were regions of lower than expected EST density (P < 0.001).
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Structural rearrangements:
A possible pericentric inversion on chromosome 2B was detected by two ESTs: BE404630 and BE500625. Missing restriction fragments in N2BT2D, N2AT2B, and N2DT2A and ditelosomic lines indicated map locations on the opposite arm of chromosome 2B vs. 2A and 2D. Due to the absence of restriction fragments in the group 2 nullisomic-tetrasomic and ditelosomic lines and the presence of all loci in all group 2 deletion lines, the loci were mapped to bins nearest the centromere. The two EST probes involved in the possible inversion constitute 2.9% of the 70 EST probes that detected loci in the centromeric consensus bins, including probes mapped to consensus bins CS and CL, plus the two probes involved in the inversion.
Duplication:
The colocalization of separate restriction fragments detected by an EST probe to the same bin could be due to duplication of genetic material or to other factors such as intragenic restriction sites. These factors confound the analysis of duplication of genetic material within chromosome bins. For this reason, duplication analysis was restricted to duplication to other group 2 bins and to other homoeologous groups. Only 25 ESTs (2.3%, based on the confirmed set of ESTs with loci mapping to homoeologous group 2 chromosomes) detected loci in two or more bins within a homoeologous group 2 chromosome, 15 of which involved duplication to bins on opposite arms. The 25 ESTs generated eight duplicate loci on 2A, 14 on 2B, and 6 on 2D.
Three hundred sixty ESTs (32.4%) had at least one locus mapped to a homoeologous group 2 chromosome and at least one locus mapped to a different homoeologous group chromosome. On a whole-chromosome basis, no significant deviations from random distribution were detected by chi-square analysis (see supplemental online materials at http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/pubs/2004/Genetics/).
On a chromosome-bin basis, the number of duplicate loci mapping within each non-group 2 bin ranged from 0 to 20. No highly significant pattern of duplication to non-group 2 chromosome bins was found. However, significant duplication (P < 0.01) was found in the chromosome bin C-1BL6-0.32, with 14 duplicated loci generated from 10 EST probes. Eight additional chromosome bins had more duplicate loci than expected with a significance level of P < 0.05 (see supplemental online materials at http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/pubs/2004/Genetics/).
Wheat-rice comparisons:
The sequences of the 552 ESTs assigned to the consensus map were compared against the rice BAC/PAC sequences at NCBI using blastN for analysis of wheat-rice colinearity. Highly significant colinearity was found between the short arm of the wheat consensus group 2 chromosome (W2) and rice chromosome 7 (R7) and between the long arm of W2 and rice chromosome 4 (R4) (Table 4). Of the 122 short-arm ESTs having matches to rice, 70.5% matched sequences on R7, and of the 158 long-arm ESTs with rice matches, 64.6% matched sequences on R4. Additionally, the most distal consensus bin on the short arm of W2 (6S) had highly significant colinearity with R4, but also had significant colinearity with R7. Of the 18 matches in bin 6S, 10 went to R4 and 5 went to R7. Colinearity between the ESTs of W2 and R7 extended into the proximal region of the long arm of W2 with consensus bin CL having good colinearity with the short arm of R7 and bin CS having good colinearity with both the short- and long-arm centromeric regions of R7. Of the 31 matches in bin CL (estimated FL C-0.36) and combined bin CL-1L (estimated FL C-0.49), 16 matched sequences on R7 and 9 matched sequences on R4. The majority of disruptions in colinearity occurred in the most distal bins of the consensus map. Although the order of wheat ESTs within bins is unknown, those ESTs mapped to specific consensus bins with matches to rice chromosomes determined to have significant colinearity were assigned to putative orders within bins on the basis of comparison with the ordered rice BAC/PAC positions along the rice chromosomes (Figure 3; supplemental online materials http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/pubs/2004/Genetics/). ESTs mapped to combined bins were excluded from Figure 3. Of the 146 ESTs mapped to specific consensus bins having matches to rice colinear chromosomes 4 and 7, 6 were excluded from the figure because the rice BACs that they matched were not included in the map of ordered rice BACs (http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/IRGSP/assignMap.pl?chr=4&site=All&markerSource=All; http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/IRGSP/assignMap.pl?chr=7&site=All&markerSource=All). Of the 140 ESTs (11.4%) included in Figure 3, 16 detected disruptions in wheat-rice synteny at the W2 consensus bin level. Of the 5 ESTs with matches to R4 in bin CL, 3 showed disruptions in synteny. Distal bin 6S contained four synteny disruptions, and 6L contained three. Wheat consensus bins tended to correspond to blocks of ordered rice BACs/PACs.
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| DISCUSSION |
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As reported elsewhere (AKHUNOV et al. 2003a; QI et al. 2004), chi-square analysis revealed numerous bins with significantly higher or lower densities than expected. The tendency for deletion line breakpoints to coincide with interstitial gene-rich clusters (ENDO and GILL 1996), possibly due to loose packing of transcriptionally active regions, has been reported for wheat group 1 (GILL et al. 1996b; SANDHU et al. 2001) and group 5 (GILL et al. 1996a; FARIS et al. 2000). Consensus bins 4S and 2L were defined by breakpoints in neighboring regions between the A and B and B and D genomes, respectively. The extremely high gene density in these small consensus bins provided additional supporting evidence for the coincidence of deletion line breakpoints and gene-rich clusters. The long-arm chromosome bin 2BL2-0.36-0.50 was unique due to its extremely high gene density ratio, >3.0, despite its location in the proximal one-half of the chromosome arm. The consensus bin 2L with the estimated fraction length 0.490.50 had a gene density ratio exceeding 34 times the expectation. Therefore, on the basis of their consensus map location (2L, estimated FL 0.49-0.50), the majority (85%) of the loci mapping to 2BL2-0.36-0.50 were concentrated around the distal 1% of the bin. There appeared to be an inaccuracy in the measurement of deletion fraction lengths involving consensus bin 4S, as evidenced by the 37 ESTs having loci in syntenous bins with nonoverlapping breakpoint fractions between chromosomes 2A and 2B. The bin 2BS4-0.75-0.84 was an EST-poor region (the gene density ratio was 0.39). This is inconsistent with the finding that part of this bin was contained in an EST-rich region (gene density ratio was 7.78) on the consensus map. The bin 2BS1-0.53-0.75 had a slightly above-average gene density (1.29). This evidence, as well as the large number of ESTs exhibiting the mapping pattern 2AS5-0.78-1.00; 2BS1-0.53-0.75; 2DS5-0.47-1.00, supported the adjustment of the 2AS5 breakpoint from 0.78 to the vicinity of 0.75. For the purpose of this article, the 37 ESTs were placed into consensus bin 4S, and the breakpoint for 2AS5 was thus assumed to be somewhat proximal of 0.78. The extreme concentration of EST loci into very small fractions of the group 2 consensus map provided evidence for a pattern of genome organization consisting of interstitial gene-rich islands, surrounded by large, gene-poor oceans. Such gene islands provide potential targets for sequencing, mapping, and gene discovery, and BAC clones from dense, syntenous regions can be used in blast searches (i) to design molecular markers, (ii) to assess function on the basis of sequence comparison, and (iii) for genomic evolutionary studies.
Consensus bins provided a higher resolution framework than individual chromosome deletion bins did for ordering blocks of ESTs along the chromosomes. However, our mapping data have shown that the homoeologous group 2 chromosomes were not perfectly conserved (see Structural rearrangements in the RESULTS and DISCUSSION) and, given the resolution of the chromosome deletion bins (two to four per chromosome arm), it is likely that many deviations in gene order and content have remained undetected.
While the number of predicted genes in eukaryotic organisms has been shown to be relatively constant, genome sizes are known to vary over five orders of magnitude (GREGORY 2001). The main difference in genome structure between species with large and small genomes appears to be the size of the gene-poor regions separating gene-rich islands. It has been estimated that
80% of genomic content in the Triticeae consists of repetitive DNA sequences (SMITH and FLAVELL 1975). A comparative study of the Sh2/A1 orthologous region in rice, sorghum (Sorghum vulgare L.), maize (Zea mays L.), and the Triticeae revealed massive expansions in certain intergenic regions in the Triticeae. The intergenic distances of wheat in comparison with rice varied from 4-fold for one gene pair to an estimated 195-fold for another gene pair (LI and GILL 2002). Therefore, we conclude that genome expansion in the Triticeae did not occur uniformly throughout the genome.
Genome expansion events caused by insertions of repetitive sequences such as retrotransposable elements (RTEs) are subject to natural selection (SANMIGUEL et al. 1996) and would be dependent on the availability of nondeleterious insertion sites (PETROV 2001). In maize, periodic insertions of retrotransposons usually occur within other RTEs (SANMIGUEL et al. 1998; GAUT et al. 2000). WALBOT and PETROV (2001) theorized that periodic retrotransposable element expansions, tempered locally by tolerance for insertions, were highly likely to produce the observed extreme unevenness in gene density due to the preferential accumulation of insertions in less gene-dense regions. Thus, the clustering of genes on small, interstitial islands within each group 2 chromosome arm, surrounded by vast regions of noncoding DNA, could reduce the probability that deleterious mutations will occur within coding regions.
Wheat-rice comparisons:
The results of the wheat-rice colinearity analysis were consistent with the findings of good colinearity between wheat homoeologous group 2 and rice chromosomes 4 and 7 by SORRELLS et al. (2003) and with previous RFLP-based comparative maps of wheat and rice (KURATA et al. 1994; VAN DEYNZE et al. 1995). The consensus bins along the homoeologous group 2 consensus map also had generally good colinearity with blocks of ordered BACs/PACs matching ESTs in each bin. At the bin level, the highest frequency of synteny disruptions occurred in the most distal consensus bins, 6S and 6L. These results were consistent with previous findings that synteny levels tend to decrease with distance from the centromere (AKHUNOV et al. 2003b). However, disruptions in synteny were also observed in the centromeric bin CL, which will be discussed in the next section. BENNETZEN et al. (1998) observed the maintenance of colinearity in gene-rich regions of rice and sorghum, despite their evolutionary distance of
50 million years. Similarly, the highly EST-rich consensus bins 4S and 2L appeared to have the best overall synteny with rice with a large number of ESTs matching with blocks of rice-ordered BAC/PAC clones and no synteny disruptions observed at the bin level.
Structural rearrangements:
The detection of a small putative pericentric inversion in chromosome 2B was supported by the bin mapping of BE404630 and BE500625 and to our knowledge has not been previously reported. Due to its small size and close proximity to the centromere, a region of low recombination, this inversion would have been difficult to detect using genetic mapping systems that rely on intragenic polymorphism. AKHUNOV et al. (2003b) reported decreased synteny levels with increased distance from the centromere, correlating with higher levels of recombination. However, they also reported that a greater number of unique loci occur in the proximal region of the B genome than in the same regions of the A and D genomes. Figure 3 indicates disruptions in synteny in the centromeric bins, as well as significant colinearity with both rice chromosomes 7 and 4 for consensus bin CL (Table 4). The EST BE404630 involved in the inversion had a significant blast match to the rice BAC AP004384 in the block colinear with consensus bin CS. Because this EST was an anomaly, with loci mapped to the centromeric chromosome bins in 2AL, 2DL, and 2BS, it was not placed on the consensus map and was not included in Figure 3. In Figure 3, three of the five ESTs with matches to rice chromosome 4 and mapped to CL showed bin-level synteny disruptions. Additionally, Figure 3 shows two disruptions in synteny between consensus bin CS and rice chromosome 7 and one for consensus bin CL. The lack of synteny in the centromeric region among the homoeologous group 2 chromosomes detected by the two wheat ESTs involved in the pericentric inversion, as well as the disruptions in synteny between consensus bin CL and rice, suggest that this has been a region subject to rearrangement during the evolution of the grasses.
A translocation involving the short arms of chromosomes 2B and 6B had previously been proposed on the basis of genetic mapping data (DEVOS et al. 1993). This rearrangement also was reported in tetraploid wheat (T. turgidum L.) from the mapping of the cDNA clone PSR899 with orthologous loci on 6S2BS (BLANCO et al. 1998). However, deletion mapping revealed markers Xpsr899-6A and Xpsr899-6D to be physically located in interstitial bins 6AS4-0.65-0.67 and 6DS2-0.45-0.79 (WENG and LAZAR 2002). The anomalous mapping pattern of EST BE604879 with loci on 6AS5-0.65-1.00, 2BS3-0.84-1.00, and 6DS6-0.99-1.00 supported previous reports that there may be a small portion of genetic material native to the distal region of 6BS and colinear with 6AS5-0.65-1.00 and 6DS6-0.99-1.00 on the distal region of chromosome 2B. The most distal consensus bin 6S (estimated FL 0.84-1.00) had highly significant colinearity with both rice chromosomes 4 and 7 (P < 0.001). It is likely that there was a shift in colinearity within consensus bin 6S, with the distal portion of the bin colinear with rice chromosome 4 and the proximal portion colinear with rice chromosome 7. Bins 6S and CL, unique in having highly significant colinearity (P < 0.001) with two different rice chromosomes, both contained ESTs having anomalous mapping patterns, indicative of structural rearrangement. Such regions within chromosomes that change from being syntenous with one region of a related species to another could indicate genomic segments more susceptible to fracture or rearrangement.
Conclusions:
High-density chromosome bin maps of ESTs provide insights into the evolution of the hexaploid wheat genome. The overall preservation of synteny relationships with rice supports the use of rice as a model organism to facilitate the study of the wheat genome. The EST approach has facilitated the discovery of two interstitial gene-rich islands and a putative pericentric inversion on chromosome 2B. The two gene-rich islands having well-preserved synteny with rice provide targets for future mapping and comparative genomics studies.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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2 Present address: USDA-ARS Biosciences Research Laboratory, Fargo, ND 58105-5674. ![]()
3 Present address: Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute, Radzikow 05-870 Blonie, Poland. ![]()
4 Present address: Eugentech, 52 Oun-Dong, Yusong, Taeson, 305-333, Republic of Korea. ![]()
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