Genomic Instability in Somatic Hybridization between <i>Poncirus</i> and <i>Citrus</i> Species Aiming to Create New Rootstocks
2022
Dominique Dambier | Pascal Barantin | Gabriel Boulard | Gilles Costantino | Pierre Mournet | Aude Perdereau | Raphaël Morillon | Patrick Ollitrault
Rootstocks are an important component for citrus adaptation to increasing biotic and abiotic stresses resulting from global climate change. There is a strong complementarity between <i>Citrus</i> species, which adapt to abiotic stresses, and <i>Poncirus trifoliata</i> and its intergeneric hybrids, which exhibit resistances or tolerances to major diseases and pests. Thus, symmetrical somatic hybridization between complementary diploid rootstocks of these two genera appears to be an efficient way to develop new tetraploid rootstocks in order to address the new challenges of the citrus industry. New intergeneric somatic hybrids were obtained by electrofusion between protoplasts of <i>Citrus</i> and <i>P. trifoliata</i> hybrids. Extensive characterization of the nuclear and cytoplasmic genomes was performed by genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) analysis. This revealed diploid cybrids and nuclear somatic hybrids. Mitochondrial genomes were mostly inherited from the callus parent, but homologous recombination events were observed for one parental combination. Chloroplasts exhibited random uniparental inheritance. GBS revealed local chromosomal instabilities for all nuclear somatic hybrids and whole chromosome eliminations for two hybrids. However, at the whole genome level, symmetrical addition of the nuclear genomes of both parents was predominant and all somatic hybrids displayed at least one trifoliate orange haplotype throughout the genome.
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