Everything about Polyploid totally explained
Polyploidy occurs in
cells and
organisms when there are more than two
homologous sets of
chromosomes.
Polyploid types are labelled according to the number of chromosome sets in the
nucleus:
- triploid (three sets; 3x), for example the genus Tardigrada
- tetraploid (four sets; 4x), for example Salmonidae fish
- pentaploid (five sets; 5x)
- hexaploid (six sets; 6x), for example wheat
- oktoploid (eight sets; 8x), for example Acipenser (genus of sturgeon fish)
- dekaploid (ten sets; 10x), for example certain strawberries
- dodecaploid (twelve sets; 12x), for example the plant Celosia argentea
Most organisms are normally
diploid; polyploidy may occur due to abnormal
cell division. It is most commonly found in plants.
Haploidy may also occur as a normal stage in an organism's life. A haploid has only one set of chromosomes.
Polyploidy occurs in some
animals, such as
goldfish,
salmon, and
salamanders, but is especially common among
ferns and flowering
plants, including both wild and cultivated
species.
Wheat, for example, after millennia of
hybridization and modification by humans, has strains that are
diploid (two sets of chromosomes),
tetraploid (four sets of chromosomes) with the common name of
durum or
macaroni wheat, and
hexaploid (six sets of chromosomes) with the common name of bread wheat. Many agriculturally important plants of the genus
Brassica are also tetraploids; their relationship is described by the
Triangle of U.
The occurrence of polyploidy is a mechanism of speciation and is known to have resulted in new species of the plant
Salsify (also known as "goatsbeard").
Examples in animals are more common in the ‘lower’ forms such as
flatworms,
leeches, and
brine shrimp. Polyploid animals are often sterile, so they often reproduce by
parthenogenesis. Polyploid salamanders and lizards are also quite common and parthenogenetic. While mammalian liver cells are polyploid, rare instances of polyploid
mammals are known, but most often result in
prenatal death.
The only known exception to this rule is an
octodontid rodent of
Argentina's harsh
desert regions, known as the Red Viscacha-Rat (
Tympanoctomys barrerae). This rodent isn't a
rat, but kin to
guinea pigs and
chinchillas. Its "new" diploid [2n] number is 102 and so its cells are roughly twice normal size. Its closest living relation is
Octomys mimax, the
Andean Viscacha-Rat of the same family, whose 2n=56. It is surmised that an
Octomys-like ancestor produced tetraploid (for example, 4n=112) offspring that were, by virtue of their doubled chromosomes, reproductively isolated from their parents; but that these likely survived the ordinarily catastrophic effects of polyploidy in mammals by shedding (via
translocation or some similar mechanism) the "extra" set of
sex chromosomes gained at this doubling.
Polyploidy can be induced in cell culture by some chemicals: the best known is
colchicine, which can result in chromosome doubling, though its use may have other less obvious consequences as well.
There are large number of polyploid crop varieties - See
Polyploid Crops below.
There are few naturally occurring polyploid
conifers. One example is the giant
tree Sequoia sempervirens or
Coast Redwood which is a hexaploid (6x) with 66 chromosomes (2n=6x=66), although the origin is unclear .
Polyploidy in humans (Aneuploidy)
True polyploidy rarely occurs in humans, although it occurs in some tissues (especially in the liver). Polyploidy refers to a numerical change in a whole set of chromosomes. Organisms in which a particular chromosome, or chromosome segment, is under- or overrepresented are said to be aneuploid (from the Greek words meaning "not," "good," and "fold"). Therefore the distinction between aneuploidy and polyploidy is that aneuploidy refers to a numerical change in part of the chromosome, whereas polyploidy refers to a numerical change in the whole set of chromosomes. : Cytogenetic Variation (p109)]
Polyploidy occurs in humans in the form of triploidy (69,XXX) and tetraploidy (92,XXXX), not to be confused with
47,XXX or
48, XXXX aneuploidy. Triploidy, usually due to
polyspermy, occurs in about 2-3% of all human pregnancies and ~15% of miscarriages. The vast majority of triploid conceptions end as
miscarriage and those that do survive to term typically die shortly after birth. In some cases survival past birth may occur longer if there's
mixoploidy with both a
diploid and a triploid cell population present.
Triploidy may be the result of either digyny (the extra haploid set is from the mother) or diandry (the extra haploid set is from the father). Diandry is almost always caused by the
fertilization of an egg by two sperm (dispermy). Digyny is most commonly caused by either failure of one meiotic division during oogenesis leading to a diploid
oocyte or failure to extrude one
polar body from the
oocyte. Diandry appears to predominate among early
miscarriages while digyny predominates among triploidy that survives into the fetal period. However, among early miscarriages, digyny is also more common in those cases <8.5 weeks gestational age or those in which an embryo is present. There are also two distinct
phenotypes in triploid
placentas and
fetuses that are dependent on the origin of the extra
haploid set. In digyny there's typically an asymmetric poorly grown
fetus, with marked
adrenal hypoplasia and a very small
placenta. In diandry, the fetus (when present) is typically normally grown or symmetrically growth restricted, with normal
adrenal glands and an abnormally large cystic placenta that's called a partial
hydatidiform mole. These parent-of-origin effects reflect the effects of
genomic imprinting.
Complete tetraploidy is more rarely diagnosed than triploidy, but is observed in 1-2% of early miscarriages. However, some tetraploid cells are not uncommonly found in chromosome analysis at
prenatal diagnosis and these are generally considered ‘harmless’. It isn't clear whether these tetraploid cells simply tend to arise during
in vitro cell culture or whether they're also present in placental cells
in vivo. There are, at any rate, very few clinical reports of fetuses/infants diagnosed with tetraploidy mosaicism.
Mixoploidy is quite commonly observed in human preimplantation embryos and includes haploid/diploid as well as diploid/tetraploid mixed cell populations. It is unknown whether these embryos fail to implant and are therefore rarely detected in ongoing pregnancies or if there's simply a selective process favoring the diploid cells.
Polyploidy in plants
Polyploidy is pervasive in plants and some estimates suggest that 30-80% of living plant species are polyploid, and many lineages show evidence of ancient polyploidy (paleopolyploidy) in their genomes. Huge explosions in
angiosperm species diversity appear to have coincided with the timing of ancient genome duplications shared by many species. Polyploid plants can arise spontaneously in nature by several mechanisms, including meiotic or mitotic failures, and fusion of unreduced (2n) gametes. Both autopolyploids (eg. potato) and allopolyploids (eg. canola, wheat, cotton) can be found among both wild and domesticated plant species. Most polyploids display
heterosis relative to their parental species, and may display novel variation or morphologies that may contribute to the processes of
speciation and eco-niche exploitation. The mechanisms leading to novel variation in newly formed allopolyploids may include gene dosage effects (resulting from more numerous copies of genome content), the reunion of divergent gene regulatory hierarchies, chromosomal rearrangements, and
epigenetic remodeling, all of which affect gene content and/or expression levels. Many of these rapid changes may contribute to reproductive isolation and speciation.
Polyploid crops
Polyploid plants tend to be larger and better at flourishing in early succession habitats such as farm fields. In the breeding of crops, the tallest and best thriving plants are selected for. Thus, many crops (and agricultural
weeds) may have unintentionally been bred to a higher level of ploidy.
The induction of polyploidy is a common technique to overcome the sterility of a hybrid species during plant breeding. For example,
Triticale is the hybrid of wheat (
Triticum turgidum) and
rye (
Secale cereale). It combines sought-after characteristics of the parents, but the initial hybrids are sterile. After polyploidization, the hybrid becomes fertile and can thus be further propagated to become triticale.
In some situations polyploid crops are preferred because they're sterile. For example many seedless fruit varieties are seedless as a result of polyploidy. Such crops are propagated using asexual techniques such as grafting.
Polyploidy in crop plants is most commonly induced by treating seeds with the chemical
colchicine.
Examples of Polyploid Crops
Triploid crops: banana, apple, ginger, watermelon, citrus
Tetraploid crops: durum or macaroni wheat, maize, cotton, potato, cabbage, leek, tobacco, peanut, kinnow, Pelargonium
Hexaploid crops: chrysanthemum, bread wheat, triticale, oat
Octaploid crops: strawberry, dahlia, pansies, sugar cane
Some crops are found in a variety of ploidy. Apples, tulips and lilies are commonly found as both diploid and as triploid. Daylilies (Hemerocallis) cultivars are available as either diploid or tetraploid. Kinnows can be tetraploid, diploid, or triploid.
Terminology
Autopolyploidy
Autopolyploids are polyploids with multiple chromosome sets derived from a single species. Autopolyploids can arise from a spontaneous, naturally occurring genome doubling (for example, the potato). Others might form following fusion of 2n gametes (unreduced gametes). Bananas and apples can be found as triploid autopolyploids. Autopolyploid plants typically display polysomic inheritance, and are therefore often infertile and propagated clonally
Allopolyploidy
Allopolyploids are polyploids with chromosomes derived from different species. Triticale is an example of an allopolyploid, having six chromosome sets, four from wheat (Triticum turgidum) and two from rye (Secale cereale). Amphidiploid is another word for an allopolyploid. Some of the best examples of allopolyploids come from the Brassicas, and the Triangle of U describes the relationships among the three common diploid Brassicas (B. oleracea, B. rapa, and B. nigra) and three allotetraploids (B. napus, B. juncea, and B. carinata) derived from hybridization among the diploids.
Homoeologous
The term is used to describe the relationship of similar chromosomes or parts of chromosomes brought together following inter-species hybridization and allopolyploidization, and whose relationship was completely homologous in an ancestral species. In allopolyploids, the homologous chromosomes within each parental sub-genome should pair faithfully during meiosis, leading to disomic inheritance; however in some allopolyploids, the homoeologous chromosomes of the parental genomes may be nearly as similar to one another as the homolgous chromosomes, leading to tetrasomic inheritance (four chromosomes pairing at meiosis), intergenomic recombination, and reduced fertility.
Homologous
The term is used to describe the relationship of similar chromosomes that pair at mitosis and meiosis. In a diploid, one homolog is derived from the male parent (pollen or sperm) and one is derived from the female parent (egg). During meiosis and gametogenesis, homologous chromosomes pair and exchange genetic material by recombination, leading to the production of sperm/pollen or eggs with chromosome haplotypes containing novel genetic variation.
Karyotype
A karyotype is the characteristic chromosome complement of a eukaryote species. The preparation and study of karyotypes is part of cytology and, more specifically, cytogenetics.
Although the replication and transcription of DNA is highly standardized in eukaryotes, the same can't be said for their karotypes, which are highly variable between species in chromosome number and in detailed organization despite being constructed out of the same macromolecules. In some cases there's even significant variation within species. This variation provides the basis for a range of studies in what might be called evolutionary cytology.
Paralogous
The term is used to describe the relationship among duplicated genes or portions of chromosomes that derived from a common ancestral DNA. Paralogous segments of DNA may arise spontaneously by errors during DNA replication, copy and paste transposons, or whole genome duplications.
Paleopolyploidy
Ancient genome duplications probably occurred in the evolutionary history of all life. Duplication events that occurred long ago in the history of various evolutionary lineages can be difficult to detect because of subsequent diploidization (such that a polyploid starts to behave cytogenetically as a diploid over time) as mutations and gene translations gradually make one copy of each chromosome unlike its other copy.
In many cases, these events can be inferred only through comparing sequenced genomes. Examples of unexpected but recently confirmed ancient genome duplications include the baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), mustard weed/thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana), rice (Oryza sativa), and an early evolutionary ancestor of the vertebrates (which includes the human lineage) and another near the origin of the teleost fishes. Angiosperms (flowering plants) have paleopolyploidy in their ancestry. All eukaryotes probably have experienced a polyploidy event at some point in their evolutionary history.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Polyploid'.
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