Abstract

Wheat lines harboring wild-relative chromosomes can be karyotypically unstable during long-term maintenance. Tissue culture exacerbates chromosomal instability but appears inefficient to induce somatic homoeologous exchange between alien and wheat chromosomes. We assessed if long-term refrigerator storage with regular renewal via self-fertilization, a widely used practice for crop germplasm maintenance, would ensure genetic fidelity of alien addition lines, and explored the possibility of inducing somatic homoeologues exchange by tissue culture. We cytogenetically characterized sampled stock seeds of originally confirmed 12 distinct wheat-Thinopyrum intermedium alien addition lines (dubbed TAI lines), and subjected immature embryos of the TAI lines to tissue culture. We find eight of the 12 TAI lines were karyotypically departed from their original identity as bona fide disomic alien addition lines due to extensive loss of whole-chromosomes of both Th. intermedium and wheat origins during the ca. 3-decade storage. Rampant numerical chromosome variations (NCVs) involving both alien and wheat chromosomes were detected in regenerated plants of all 12 studied TAI lines, but at variable rates among the wheat sub-genomes and chromosomes. Compared with NCVs, structural chromosome variations (SCVs) occurred at substantially lower rates, and no SCV involving the added alien chromosomes was observed. The NCVs manifested only moderate effects on phenotypes of the regenerated plants under field conditions.

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