Solanum brevidens synteny groups were examined with 47 widely-distributed RFLP markers in 17 BC2 progeny from six fertile BC1 plants. The BC1 plants were derived from a single S. brevidens + S. tuberosum somatic hybrid backcrossed with S. tuberosum (potato). Probes which were linked in potato and tomato were also found to be syntenic along each of the 12 S. brevidens chromosomes. More than half of the S. brevidens synteny groups had lost one or more S. brevidens-specific RFLPs in the BC2, suggesting that recombination had occurred. For 8 of the 12 S. brevidens RFLP synteny groups, the frequency of recombinant chromosomes exceeded that of intact parental chromosomes. Using the RFLP data, 161 RAPD markers were tentatively located throughout the S. brevidens genome. Further analyses with 39 of these 161 RAPD markers generally showed that RAPD and RFLP results were comparable, but some inconsistencies were noted with 14 of the 39 RAPD markers. The extent of marker loss and the high frequency of synteny groups which were marked by a single S. brevidens-specific RFLP marker suggest that the S. brevidens chromosomes have some pairing affinity with potato chromosomes. This interaction should facilitate the transfer of novel disease-resistance traits into potato breeding lines. One plant was recovered with the chromosome number of S. tuberosum (2n=48) that carried a single S. brevidens RFLP marker, suggesting transfer of this S. brevidens marker into the genome of S. tuberosum.
Segregation of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) loci was monitored to determine the degree of homeologous pairing and recombination in a hexaploid somatic hybrid, A206, the result of protoplast fusion between Solanum tuberosum (PI 203900, a tetraploid cultivated potato) and Solanum brevidens (PI 218228), a diploid, sexually incompatible, distant relative harboring several traits for disease resistance. Somatic hybrid A206 was crossed to Katahdin, a tetraploid potato cultivar, to generate a segregating population of pentaploid progeny. Although the clones of the tetraploid S. tuberosum lines PI 203900 and Katahdin were highly polymorphic, the diploid S. brevidens clone was homozygous at all but two of the tested RFLP loci. Thus, homeologous recombination could be detected only when S. tuberosum and S. brevidens chromosomes paired and the S. brevidens homologs then segregated into separate gametes. A bias toward homologous pairing was observed for all 12 chromosomes. At least four and perhaps six chromosomes participated in homologous pairing only; each of 24 progeny contained all S. brevidens-derived RFLP markers for chromosomes 4, 8, 9 and 10. The remaining six chromosomes paired with their homolog(s) about twice as often as expected if hexaploid pairings were completely random. Where detectable with RFLPs, homeologous recombination (both single and double) occurred at a frequency of 1.31 per chromosome. Cytological observations of meiosis I in the somatic hybrid indicated that homeologous pairing had occurred. Enhanced recombinational activity was observed for chromosome 2. A specific small deletion from chromosome 4 was detected in A206 and 11 other somatic hybrids out of 14 screened.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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