Developmental Instability and Gene Dysregulation in an Extracted Tetraploid from Hexaploid Wheat

Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Sep 13;24(18):14037. doi: 10.3390/ijms241814037.

Abstract

The BBAA subgenomes of hexaploid common wheat can be 'extracted' to constitute a viable and self-reproducing novel tetraploid wheat, termed extracted tetraploid wheat (ETW). Prior studies have shown ETW manifesting phenotypic abnormalities and alteration in gene expression and epigenetic modifications. No population level investigation has been conducted, leaving the issue unclear regarding whether developmental stability, an essential property evolved in all natural organisms, might have been undermined in ETW. Here, we measured variations in five morphological traits and somatic chromosomal stability in populations of ETW and of its hexaploid donor, a resynthesized hexaploid and a natural tetraploid wheat. We observed phenotypic defects in ETW. Meanwhile, we documented much greater within-population variations in ETW than in the other wheat genotypes, most probably due to disrupted developmental stability in ETW. Also, somatic structural chromosome variations were detected only in ETW. Comparative transcriptome analyses indicated that the disrupted developmental stability of ETW is likely linked to massive dysregulation of genome-wide gene expression rather than to genetic mutations. Population network analysis of gene expression implicated intrinsic connectivity among the variable traits, while gene set enrichment analysis provided possible links between dysregulated gene expression and interlaced trait variation.

Keywords: allopolyploidy; co-expression network; developmental stability; dysregulated gene expression; homeostasis; subgenome extraction.