- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Vinogradov, A. E.
- Articles by Chubinishvili, A. T.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Vinogradov, A. E.
- Articles by Chubinishvili, A. T.
Genome Reduction in a Hemiclonal Frog Rana esculenta From Radioactively Contaminated Areas
Alexander E. Vinogradova and Alexander T. Chubinishviliba Institute of Cytology, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg 194064, Russia
b N. K. Koltsov Institute of Developmental Biology, Moscow 117808, Russia
Corresponding author: Alexander E. Vinogradov, Institute of Cytology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Tikhoretsky Ave., 4, St. Petersburg 194064, Russia., aevin{at}mail.cytspb.rssi.ru (E-mail)
Communicating editor: W. STEPHAN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
A decrease in genome size was found in the hemiclonal hybridogenetic frog Rana esculenta (R. ridibunda x R. lessonae) from areas of radioactive contamination that resulted from the Chernobyl fallout. This genome reduction was of up to 4% and correlated with the background level of gamma-radiation (linear regression corresponded on average to -0.4% per doubling of radiation level). No change in genome size was observed in the coexisting parental species R. lessonae. There was no correlation between genome size and body mass in R. esculenta froglets, which have metamorphosed in the year of the study. The hemiclonal forms may become a suitable object for study on biological significance of individual DNA sequences (and of genome size as a whole) because mutant animals with deletions in a specified genome can arise after a low radiation dose. The proneness to genetic damage makes such forms also a prospective bioindicator of radioactive (and possibly other mutagenic) pollution with the effects of genetic damage conveniently and rapidly monitored by DNA flow cytometry.
THE hemiclonal (hybridogenetic, non-Mendelian) frog Rana esculenta L. arose from the original hybridization of R. ridibunda Pall. x R. lessonae Cam. (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
The hemiclonal genomes of R. esculenta and Poeciliopsis fishes are known to accumulate deleterious recessive mutations (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
In the present investigation, frogs of the R. esculenta-complex from the areas of radioactive contamination that resulted from the Chernobyl fallout were studied by means of DNA flow cytometry.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Frogs were collected in August 1994 in the Bryansk region (Byelorussia) from three places with different background levels of radioactive contamination: environs of Sennoe village (
-radiation was 220 µR/hr), environs of Petryatinka village (
-radiation was 60 µR/hr), and, near the national nature reserve Bryansky Les, a control point without contamination (
-radiation was 15 µR/hr). The map is shown in Figure 1. Genome size was determined by means of DNA flow cytometry in blood cells as described previously (![]()
![]()
|
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
|---|
We found a statistically significant decrease in genome size (of up to 4%) in R. esculenta from the radioactively contaminated points (Figure 2). All the populations were of the most common, diploid L-E type (i.e., R. esculenta coexists with R. lessonae, and the lessonae genome is eliminated). The genome size of the coexisting parental R. lessonae was not changed (Figure 2). The mean genome size of R. esculenta was log-linearly correlated with the background level of
-radiation (Figure 3). The linear regression corresponded on average to -0.4% per doubling of radiation level.
|
|
The most plausible explanation for genome reduction in R. esculenta (and the absence of such reduction in the coexisting parents) is that these frogs resulted from fertilization with gametes having deletions in the clonal ridibunda genome (of up to 8%). The R. esculenta males, which produced sperm with ridibunda genome (in accordance with their population type) but had part of sperms with the decreased DNA content, were found in the L-E population from a radioactively contaminated area (![]()
-radiation level was also much higher in the previous study, conducted exactly 1 yr after the fallout (1.1 mR/hr; environs of Babichi village, Byelorussia, 130 km W-SW from the area of the present study). No change in genome size was then found in gametes and somatic cells of coexisting R. lessonae, nor in somatic cells of R. esculenta (born before the fallout), which suggests that the preferential damage occurred at gametogenesis in the clonal ridibunda genome. Such damage should then accumulate according to the expectation for the sheltered genome condition (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Owing to the increased vulnerability of a genome, its accumulation of genetic damage under a sheltered condition, and the outcome of its change in genome size, hemiclonal forms may become a prospective bioindicator of radioactive (and possibly other mutagenic) pollution with the effects of genetic damage convenient for rapid registration with DNA flow cytometry.
There was no correlation between genome size and body mass in R. esculenta froglets, which had metamorphosed in the year of the study, although body masses of animals from the point with the highest radiation level (Sennoe) seemed to be more scattered (Figure 4). This suggests that deletions of up to 4% of total DNA (probably, of up to 8% in the clonal ridibunda genome) were not connected with fitness reduction (because the main adaptive goal of the froglets is to gain weight). Even if the revealed deletions did not involve the coding DNA, the question arises about the biological significance of changes in genome size (or the role of redundant, noncoding DNA). The absence of correlation between genome size and froglets weight suggests the neutralist interpretation for the existence of redundant DNA (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
|
The hybridogenetic forms could become a suitable object for research on biological significance of individual genomic elements (and of genome size as a whole) because mutants with deletions in a specified genome can arise after a low-dose mutagenic action, probably not complicated by the heavy damage of the rest of the genome. The latter was the main objection to the conclusion of the study on radiation-induced deletion mutants in Drosophila (![]()
![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The authors are grateful to Robert C. Vrijenhoek and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments. This work was supported by a grant from the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (to A.V.).
Manuscript received August 10, 1998; Accepted for publication December 14, 1998.
| LITERATURE CITED |
|---|
BERGER, L., 1968 Morphology of the F1 generation of various crosses within Rana esculenta-complex. Acta Zool. Cracow 13:301-324.
CHARLESWORTH, B., P. SNIEGOWSKI, and W. STEPHAN, 1994 The evolutionary dynamics of repetitive DNA in eukaryotes. Nature 371:215-220[Medline].
Daily Telegraph World Atlas, 1998 Telegraph Publications, London.
ELDER, J. F., JR. and B. J. TURNER, 1995 Concerted evolution of repetitive DNA sequences in eukaryotes. Q. Rev. Biol. 70:297-320[Medline].
GIORGI, P. P., 1992 Sex and the male stick insect. Nature 357:444-445.
GRAF, J. D., and M. POLLS-PELAZ, 1989 Evolutionary genetics of the Rana esculenta hybrid complex, pp. 289302 in Evolution and Ecology of Unisexual Vertebrates, edited by R. DAWLEY and J. BOGART. New York State Museum, Albany, NY.
LESLIE, J. F. and R. C. VRIJENHOEK, 1978 Genetic dissection of clonally inherited genomes of Poeciliopsis. I. Linkage analysis and preliminary assessment of deleterious gene load. Genetics 90:801-811
LESLIE, J. F. and R. C. VRIJENHOEK, 1980 Consideration of Muller's ratchet mechanism through studies of genetic linkage and genomic compatibilities in clonally reproducing Poeciliopsis. Evolution 34:1105-1115.
MORELL, V., 1994 Rise and fall of the Y chromosome. Science 263:171-172
MULLER, H. J., 1914 A gene for the fourth chromosome of Drosophila. J. Exp. Zool. 17:325-336.
MULLER, H. J., 1964 The relation of recombination to mutational advance. Mutat. Res. 1:2-9.
NEI, M., 1970 Accumulation of nonfunctional genes on sheltered chromosomes. Am. Nat. 104:311-322.
PAGEL, M. and R. A. JOHNSTONE, 1992 Variation across species in the size of the nuclear genome supports the junk-DNA explanation for the C-value paradox. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. B 249:119-124[Medline].
QUATTRO, J. M., J. C. AVISE, and R. C. VRIJENHOEK, 1991 Molecular evidence for multiple origins of hybridogenetic fish clones (Poeciliidae: Poeciliopsis). Genetics 127:391-398[Abstract].
RICE, W. R., 1994 Degeneration of a nonrecombining chromosome. Science 263:230-232
TUNNER, H. G. and S. HEPPICH, 1981 Premeiotic genome exclusion during oogenesis in the common edible frog, Rana esculenta.. Naturwissenschaften 607:207-208.
UZZELL, T., H. HOTZ, and L. BERGER, 1980 Genome exclusion in gametogenesis by an interspecific Rana hybrid: evidence from electrophoresis of individual oocytes. J. Exp. Zool. 214:251-259.
VINOGRADOV, A. E., 1995 Nucleotypic effect in homeotherms: body mass-corrected basal metabolic rate of mammals is related to genome size. Evolution 49:1249-1259.
VINOGRADOV, A. E., 1998 Buffering: a possible passive-homeostasis role for redundant DNA. J. Theor. Biol. 193:197-199[Medline].
VINOGRADOV, A. E., L. J. BORKIN, R. GUNTHER, and J. M. ROSANOV, 1990 Genome elimination in diploid and triploid Rana esculenta males: cytological evidence from DNA flow cytometry. Genome 33:619-627[Medline].
VINOGRADOV, A. E., L. J. BORKIN, R. GUNTHER, and J. M. ROSANOV, 1991 Two germ cell lineages with genomes of different species in one and the same animal. Hereditas 114:245-251[Medline].
WU, C. I., J. R. TRUE, and N. JOHNSON, 1989 Fitness reduction associated with the deletion of a satellite DNA array. Nature 341:248-251[Medline].
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
T. R. GREGORY The C-value Enigma in Plants and Animals: A Review of Parallels and an Appeal for Partnership Ann. Bot., January 1, 2005; 95(1): 133 - 146. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Vinogradov, A. E.
- Articles by Chubinishvili, A. T.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Vinogradov, A. E.
- Articles by Chubinishvili, A. T.




, Bryansky Les;
, Petryatinka;
, Sennoe.