Abstract

Analysis of structural chromosomal polymorphism revealed the presence of a previously reported 2A·4B translocation common to all 15 strains of Ethiopian tetraploid wheat examined. Using the C-banding technique, we found two new translocations,T1B·6B and T5B·6B, and a pericentric inversion of chromosome 5A. The C-banding pattern indicated that in all three translocations the breakpoint was located in the centromeric region. Sequential N-banding and genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) confirmed the location of the breakpoint of translocation 2A·4B, and revealed that the breakpoint of another known translocation, 2A-2B, was in the proximal region of 2BL. The fixation of the 2A·4B translocation indicates the monophyletic origin of Ethiopian tetraploid wheat and the presence of a very severe bottleneck effect during its dispersal.

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