Multiple haploids, triploids, and tetraploids found in modern-day "living fossil" Ginkgo biloba

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Authors

ŠMARDA Petr HOROVÁ Lucie KNÁPEK Ondřej DIECK Heidi DIECK Martin RAŽNÁ Katarína HRUBÍK Pavel ORLOCI Lászlo PAPP Lászlo VESELÁ Kristýna VESELÝ Pavel BUREŠ Petr

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Horticulture Research
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
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Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0055-9
Keywords gymnosperms; polyploidy (incl. somatic); haploidy; artificial selection; intraspecific genome size variation; dihaploid production; stomatal size; polyembryony
Description Ginkgo biloba, the last extant representative of a lineage of Mesozoic gymnosperms, is one of the few seed plants with an exceptionally long (similar to 300 Myr) evolutionary history free of genome-wide duplications (polyploidy). Despite this genome conservatism, we have recently found a viable spontaneous tetraploid Ginkgo sapling during routine screening of several plants, demonstrating that natural polyploidy is possible in Ginkgo. Here we provide a much wider flow cytometry survey of ploidy in some European Ginkgo collections, and own seedlings (>2200 individuals and similar to 200 cultivars). We found a surprisingly high level of ploidy variation in modern-day Ginkgo and documented altogether 13 haploid, 3 triploid, and 10 tetraploid Ginkgo plants or cultivars, most of them being morphologically distinct from common diploids. Haploids frequently produced polyploid (dihaploid) buds or branches. Tetraploids showed some genome size variation. The surveyed plants provide a unique resource for future Ginkgo research and breeding, and they might be used to accelerate the modern diversification of this nearly extinct plant lineage.
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