Genetic and genomic aspects of hybridization in ferns

The morphological and ecological intermediacy of hybrid taxa has long interested and challenged fern biologists, resulting in numerous systematic contributions focused on disentanglinl~ relationships within reticulate species complexes. From a genetic perspective, hybrid ferns are especially interes...

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Published inJournal of systematics and evolution : JSE Vol. 54; no. 6; pp. 638 - 655
Main Author Sigel, Erin M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Beijing Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.11.2016
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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ISSN1674-4918
1759-6831
DOI10.1111/jse.12226

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Summary:The morphological and ecological intermediacy of hybrid taxa has long interested and challenged fern biologists, resulting in numerous systematic contributions focused on disentanglinl~ relationships within reticulate species complexes. From a genetic perspective, hybrid ferns are especially interesting because they represent the union of divergent parental genomes in unique evolutionary entities. This review summarizes advances in our knowledge of the genetic and genomic aspects of hybridization in ferns from the mid-2oth century to the present. The different organismal products of hybridization, evolutionary aspects of additive and non-additive gene expression in allopolyploids, genetic and genomic mechanisms leading to gene silencing and loss, the roles of multiple origins and introgression for imparting genetic variation to hybrid fern taxa and their progenitors, and the utility of allopolyploid ferns to investigate mechanisms of genome evolution in the homosporous ferns are discussed. Comparisons are made to other plant lineages and important future research directions are highlighted, with the goal of stimulating additional research on hybrid ferns.
Bibliography:The morphological and ecological intermediacy of hybrid taxa has long interested and challenged fern biologists, resulting in numerous systematic contributions focused on disentanglinl~ relationships within reticulate species complexes. From a genetic perspective, hybrid ferns are especially interesting because they represent the union of divergent parental genomes in unique evolutionary entities. This review summarizes advances in our knowledge of the genetic and genomic aspects of hybridization in ferns from the mid-2oth century to the present. The different organismal products of hybridization, evolutionary aspects of additive and non-additive gene expression in allopolyploids, genetic and genomic mechanisms leading to gene silencing and loss, the roles of multiple origins and introgression for imparting genetic variation to hybrid fern taxa and their progenitors, and the utility of allopolyploid ferns to investigate mechanisms of genome evolution in the homosporous ferns are discussed. Comparisons are made to other plant lineages and important future research directions are highlighted, with the goal of stimulating additional research on hybrid ferns.
11-5779/Q
allopolyploidy, fixed heterozygosity, gene expression, genome evolution, homoploid hybrids, introgression, multipleorigins, sterile hybrids.
istex:8186E008746A3A52F9D5AFEDA6A16A75BEC8288F
Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellowship
ark:/67375/WNG-4V80RDP5-2
ArticleID:JSE12226
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
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ISSN:1674-4918
1759-6831
DOI:10.1111/jse.12226