Original Article
Heredity (2007) 98, 411–418. doi:10.1038/sj.hdy.6800957; published online 21 March 2007
Meiotic recombination in Turnera (Turneraceae): extreme sexual difference in rates, but no evidence for recombination suppression associated with the distyly (S) locus
J D J Labonne1, A J Hilliker1 and J S Shore1
1Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Correspondence: Dr JS Shore, Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3J 1P3. E-mail: shore@yorku.ca
Received 25 August 2006; Revised 4 December 2006; Accepted 5 February 2007; Published online 21 March 2007.
Abstract
To explore the rate of recombination resulting from male vs female meiosis, crosses were performed using distylous Turnera subulata as well as a cross involving the introgression of genes from T. krapovickasii into T. subulata. We assayed four loci on the chromosome bearing the S-locus as well as two loci on each of two other linkage groups. Substantial and consistent dimorphism in recombination rates was found with female meiosis resulting in as much as a
6-fold increase relative to male. Aberrant single locus segregation ratios occurred for some loci, particularly when the male (pollen) parent was heterozygous and the cross involved introgressed genes. The extreme trend of greater recombination resulting from female meiosis was, however, maintained in crosses where no aberrant ratios occurred, indicating that the sex dimorphism in recombination is not the result of aberrant segregation. We also exploited this distylous species and tested whether there is recombination suppression around the S-locus because of an inversion or other chromosome rearrangement(s). We found no significant evidence for recombination suppression.
Keywords:
Turnera, distyly, meiotic recombination, recombination suppression
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