Horizontal transfer of nuclear DNA between vascular plants

Horizontal transfer of nuclear DNA between vascular plants
One example of wild barley containing nonnative DNA-sequences of Panicoideae origin. Credit: Dr. Frank Blattner/IPK

A Czech-German team of researchers around Dr. Václav Mahelka from the Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Dr. Frank Blattner from the Leibniz-Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK) publishes findings in the scientific journal PNAS suggesting that the transfer of nuclear genes from one vascular plant species to another without sexual fertilization is not a rare event.

The exchange and recombination of genetic material between procaryotes and from parasites and pathogens into plants is known to be commonplace. Also plant to plant exchanges of nonnuclear DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) are also relatively common. However, nuclear gene transfers between sexual incompatible vascular plant species were thought to be extremely rare. This assumption is now questioned by a study online published as an Early Edition of the renowned scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Its authors demonstrate, that such events are not as rare as thought hitherto. Rather, their research findings indicate, that between vascular is a genuine biological phenomenon.

"In our study we analysed the of about 25 grass species, mainly from the barley genus Hordeum. In 16 species out of them we proved, that at least nine independent DNA-transfers of Panicoideae origin ̶ a subfamily comprising important crop species like maize, sugar cane and panic ̶ seem to have been occurred," illustrates the lead author of the study Václav Mahelka from the Institute of Botany in Prúhonice. "Our phylogenetic, cytogenetic, and genomic analyses imply that the nonnative sequences were acquired during the last 1 to 5 My through a series of independent events." His colleague Dr. Frank Blattner from IPK in Gatersleben adds "These findings were a surprise, because Poodieae and Panicoideae lineages separated from one another around 60 Mya and are sexually incompatible. However, now we assume, that the supposed rarity of exotic DNA transfer between vascular plants more likely reflects technical limitations in its detection than reflecting essential biological circumstances."

More information: Václav Mahelka et al. Multiple horizontal transfers of nuclear ribosomal genes between phylogenetically distinct grass lineages, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1613375114

Provided by Leibniz Institute

Citation: Horizontal transfer of nuclear DNA between vascular plants (2017, January 31) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-01-horizontal-nuclear-dna-vascular.html
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