amphidiploid

views updated May 17 2018

amphidiploid Describing an organism, cell, or nucleus that contains diploid sets of chromosomes originating from two different species. Crosses between taxonomically unrelated organisms are usually infertile, principally because the chromosomes lack a partner with which to pair during meiosis. However, if there is doubling of the parental sets of chromosomes, pairing can take place within each set, and meiosis may proceed to produce fertile gametes. For example, the F1 hybrid resulting from a cross between a cabbage (Brassica sp.) and a radish (Raphanus sp.) is sterile. Yet such crosses may produce a few seeds that are capable of germinating into fertile F2 plants. These seeds form following the chance fusion of two unreduced gametes, each of which contain all parental chromosomes. Hence, instead of the 18 chromosomes of the F1 hybrid (nine from each parent), the F2 has 36 chromosomes in its somatic nuclei, and thus contains the full diploid sets of both its progenitor species. During meiosis the chromosomes undergo pairing just like a normal diploid plant, and the result is a generally true-breeding hybrid, named Raphanobrassica. See also allopolyploid.

amphidiploid

views updated Jun 27 2018

amphidiploid An allopolyploid in which the genetic behaviour of the constitutive genomes is diploid, such that bivalents between chromosomes originating from different genomes do not form during meiosis.

amphidiploid

views updated May 23 2018

amphidiploid An allopolyploid in which the genetic behaviour of the constitutive genomes is diploid, such that bivalents between chromosomes originating from different genomes do not form during meiosis.