Polyploidy and Genome Evolution || Genomic Plasticity in Polyploid Wheat
β Scribed by Soltis, Pamela S.; Soltis, Douglas E.
- Book ID
- 119974963
- Publisher
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- German
- Weight
- 396 KB
- Edition
- 2012
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 3642314422
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Polyploidy β whole-genome duplication (WGD) β is a fundamental driver of biodiversity with significant consequences for genome structure, organization, and evolution.Β Once considered a speciation process common only in plants, polyploidy is now recognized to have played a major role in the structure, gene content, and evolution of most eukaryotic genomes.Β In fact, the diversity of eukaryotes seems closely tied to multiple WGDs. Polyploidy generates new genomic interactions β initially resulting in βgenomic and transcriptomic shockβ β that must be resolved in a new polyploid lineage.Β This process essentially acts as a βresetβ button, resulting in genomic changes that may ultimately promote adaptive speciation. Β This book brings together for the first time the conceptual and theoretical underpinnings of polyploid genome evolution with syntheses of the patterns and processes of genome evolution in diverse polyploid groups.Β Because polyploidy is most common and best studied in plants, the book emphasizes plant models, but recent studies of vertebrates and fungi are providing fresh perspectives on factors that allow polyploid speciation and shape polyploid genomes.Β The emerging paradigm is that polyploidy β through alterations in genome structure and gene regulation β generates genetic and phenotypic novelty that manifests itself at the chromosomal, physiological, and organismal levels, with long-term ecological and evolutionary consequences.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Polyploidy plays an important role in biological diversity, trait improvement, and plant species survival. Understanding the evolutionary phenomenon of polyploidy is a key challenge for plant and crop scientists. This book is made up of contributions from leading researchers in the field from around