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Comparative Study
. 2005 Aug;96(2):229-44.
doi: 10.1093/aob/mci170. Epub 2005 May 19.

First nuclear DNA amounts in more than 300 angiosperms

Affiliations
Comparative Study

First nuclear DNA amounts in more than 300 angiosperms

B J M Zonneveld et al. Ann Bot. 2005 Aug.

Abstract

Background and aims: Genome size (DNA C-value) data are key biodiversity characters of fundamental significance used in a wide variety of biological fields. Since 1976, Bennett and colleagues have made scattered published and unpublished genome size data more widely accessible by assembling them into user-friendly compilations. Initially these were published as hard copy lists, but since 1997 they have also been made available electronically (see the Plant DNA C-values database http://www.kew.org/cval/homepage.html). Nevertheless, at the Second Plant Genome Size Meeting in 2003, Bennett noted that as many as 1000 DNA C-value estimates were still unpublished and hence unavailable. Scientists were strongly encouraged to communicate such unpublished data. The present work combines the databasing experience of the Kew-based authors with the unpublished C-values produced by Zonneveld to make a large body of valuable genome size data available to the scientific community.

Methods: C-values for angiosperm species, selected primarily for their horticultural interest, were estimated by flow cytometry using the fluorochrome propidium iodide. The data were compiled into a table whose form is similar to previously published lists of DNA amounts by Bennett and colleagues.

Key results and conclusions: The present work contains C-values for 411 taxa including first values for 308 species not listed previously by Bennett and colleagues. Based on a recent estimate of the global published output of angiosperm DNA C-value data (i.e. 200 first C-value estimates per annum) the present work equals 1.5 years of average global published output; and constitutes over 12 % of the latest 5-year global target set by the Second Plant Genome Size Workshop (see http://www.kew.org/cval/workshopreport.html). Hopefully, the present example will encourage others to unveil further valuable data which otherwise may lie forever unpublished and unavailable for comparative analyses.

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Figures

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Fig. 1.
Comparisons between C-values for species listed in the Appendix and ‘prime’ C-values for the same species listed in the Plant DNA C-values database (release 3·0, December 2004). (A) Comparison for all 103 species. Open circles correspond to the 18 species whose C-values in the Appendix differ by >30 % from the ‘prime’ C-values in the database. (B) Comparison between C-values for seven species listed in the Appendix and the accepted C-values for these calibration standards given in Bennett and Smith (1991).

References

    1. APG II. 2003. An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 141: 399–436.
    1. Bennett MD, Leitch IJ. 1995. Nuclear DNA amounts in angiosperms. Annals of Botany 76: 113–176.
    1. Bennett MD, Leitch IJ. 1997. Nuclear DNA amounts in angiosperms: 583 new estimates. Annals of Botany 80: 169–196.
    1. Bennett MD, Leitch IJ. 2004. Plant DNA C-values database (release 3·0, December 2004). http://www.kew.org/cval/homepage.html
    1. Bennett MD, Leitch IJ. 2005. Nuclear DNA amounts in angiosperms: progress, problems and prospects. Annals of Botany 95: 45–90. - PMC - PubMed

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