Abstract
INTERSPECIFIC hybridization together with polyploidy has been an important force in the evolution of many of our graminaceous crop plants. Both wheat (Triticum aestivum) and oats (Avena sativa), for example, are natural allohexaploids derived in each case from the hybridization of three separate but related diploid species. The efforts of plant breeders to synthesize stable and fertile polyploids of this kind have, on the whole, been unsuccessful. The main reason for this is that whereas meiosis in natural allopolyploids such as wheat is extremely regular this is not the case with “synthetic” polyploids. In wheat precise control over pairing at meiosis is achieved by a gene or a cluster of genes on chromosome SB. The gene acts by restricting the pairing to homologous chromosomes with the result that only bivalents are formed, disjunction is regular and inheritance is completely disomic1,2. In the artificial polyploids at pachytene there is pairing between both homologous chromosomes (from the same species) and “corresponding” homoeologous chromosomes (from different species). The result is an extremely irregular metaphase 1 comprising multivalents and univalents as well as bivalents. Segregation is irregular and a certain degree of infertility is inevitable.
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