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. 2002 May;104(6-7):901-907.
doi: 10.1007/s00122-001-0862-4. Epub 2002 Feb 22.

Genome plasticity in Festuca arundinacea: direct response to temperature changes by redundancy modulation of interspersed DNA repeats

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Genome plasticity in Festuca arundinacea: direct response to temperature changes by redundancy modulation of interspersed DNA repeats

M. Ceccarelli et al. Theor Appl Genet. 2002 May.

Abstract

The response of the genome of Festuca arundinacea seedlings to changes in the temperature at which they were grown was investigated. Fifteen repeated sequences in the nuclear DNA were isolated and hybridized to the genomic DNA of seedlings grown at 10 degrees C or 30 degrees C. The redundancies of sequences recognized by four probes ( FaA5, FaH8, FaH13 and FaH14), were found to differ significantly in the two DNAs. DNA sequences recognized by FaH8, FaH13 and FaH14 were more represented in the genome of the 30 degrees C-raised seedlings than in the genome of the 10 degrees C-raised seedlings (76.5 x 10(3), 1.9 x 10(3), and 111.8 x 10(3) copies per haploid, 1C genome vs 62.7 x 10(3), 1.3 x 10(3), and 80.8 x 10(3) copies, respectively). In contrast, FaA5-related sequences were more represented in the genome of seedlings grown at the lower temperature (15.5 x 10(3) vs 10.2 x 10(3) copies, respectively). Southern-blot hybridization of these repeats to digested genomic DNA produced patterns which indicated that the probe sequences were part of longer repeated sequences having a limited degree of structural heterogeneity. These patterns were partly different when the probes were hybridized to the DNA from seedlings grown at 10 degrees C or 30 degrees C. In situ hybridization showed that the DNA sequences recognized by each probe were scattered along the length of all the chromosomes, with preferential location of FaA5- and FaH13-related sequences at given, mainly centromeric, regions of certain chromosomes. These findings suggest that redundancy modulations of interspersed repeated sequences allow direct responses of the genome of F. arundinacea to changes in environmental temperature.

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