Eighteen pairs of diploid-haploid twin-seedlings were identified and screened out fromspecial rice SARII-628 population. Five pairs of themwere selected and randomly designated as A, B, C, Dand E. Simple sequence repe...Eighteen pairs of diploid-haploid twin-seedlings were identified and screened out fromspecial rice SARII-628 population. Five pairs of themwere selected and randomly designated as A, B, C, Dand E. Simple sequence repeats (SSR) analysisshowed that there was no difference among 310 siteswhich indicated that there was no base mutation onDNA primary structure. DNA methylation plays animportant role in gene expression regulation duringgrowth and development stages in eukaryotes. Amodified AFLP technique (methylation-sensitiveAFLP, MSAP) was employed to detect the DNA me-thylation patterns in the 5′-CCGG sites of the fivepairs of twin-seedlings. Although no methylationmutation was detected among the five diploids,forty-three methylation mutation sites were foundfrom the corresponding haploids. The MSAP ratios,which were the ratios of MSAP sites to the total am-plified sites, in five haploids were 18.79%, 19.35%,18.49%, 18.45% and 18.75%, respectively. And cor-responding full methylation levels (5′-CmCGG indouble strands) of those haploids were 10.58%,11.3%, 10.11%, 10.09% and 10.34%, respectively.Both MSAP and full methylation levels in the fivehaploids were higher than that of their correspondingdiploids, which suggested that hypermethylation oc-curred in some 5′-CCGG sites. Five types of MASPpatterns among the five pairs of twin-seedlings weredetected as follows: (1) no changes, methylation lev-els were the same in both haploids and diploids; (2) demethylation, diploid was methylated but no me-thylation in the same site in haploid; (3) hypermethy-lation, the methylation level in haploid was higher than those in diploid; (4) hypomethylation, methyla-tion in haploid was lower than those in diploid; (5) undecided pattern, change trend of methylation lev-els in haploids was not decided. The bands of 18 sites were reclaimed, then sequenced and searched on website to determine the sites of those sequences on rice chromosomes. The result showed that the methylation mutation involved the whole rice genome and 12 pairs 展开更多
文摘Eighteen pairs of diploid-haploid twin-seedlings were identified and screened out fromspecial rice SARII-628 population. Five pairs of themwere selected and randomly designated as A, B, C, Dand E. Simple sequence repeats (SSR) analysisshowed that there was no difference among 310 siteswhich indicated that there was no base mutation onDNA primary structure. DNA methylation plays animportant role in gene expression regulation duringgrowth and development stages in eukaryotes. Amodified AFLP technique (methylation-sensitiveAFLP, MSAP) was employed to detect the DNA me-thylation patterns in the 5′-CCGG sites of the fivepairs of twin-seedlings. Although no methylationmutation was detected among the five diploids,forty-three methylation mutation sites were foundfrom the corresponding haploids. The MSAP ratios,which were the ratios of MSAP sites to the total am-plified sites, in five haploids were 18.79%, 19.35%,18.49%, 18.45% and 18.75%, respectively. And cor-responding full methylation levels (5′-CmCGG indouble strands) of those haploids were 10.58%,11.3%, 10.11%, 10.09% and 10.34%, respectively.Both MSAP and full methylation levels in the fivehaploids were higher than that of their correspondingdiploids, which suggested that hypermethylation oc-curred in some 5′-CCGG sites. Five types of MASPpatterns among the five pairs of twin-seedlings weredetected as follows: (1) no changes, methylation lev-els were the same in both haploids and diploids; (2) demethylation, diploid was methylated but no me-thylation in the same site in haploid; (3) hypermethy-lation, the methylation level in haploid was higher than those in diploid; (4) hypomethylation, methyla-tion in haploid was lower than those in diploid; (5) undecided pattern, change trend of methylation lev-els in haploids was not decided. The bands of 18 sites were reclaimed, then sequenced and searched on website to determine the sites of those sequences on rice chromosomes. The result showed that the methylation mutation involved the whole rice genome and 12 pairs