(Vol.17, 2014-12) The Role of Allotriploidy in the Evolution of Meconopis (Papaveraceae): A Preliminary Study of Ancient Polyploid and Hybrid Speciation
Abstract
Also known as the Himalayan Poppy, Meconopsis is a genus of herbaceous
plants growing only in the high elevation habits of the Himalaya and its adjacent plateau
and mountain areas. The genus exhibits high morphological and ecological diversity,
but the major causes of divergence in Meconopsis have not previously been studied. Our
recent revised taxonomic classification, based on a molecular phylogeny, divided the
genus into four monophyletic sections. Because chromosome number varies among
these sections and our previous phylogenetic analyses revealed extensive incongruence
between the recovered nrITS and cpDNA trees, possibly due to ancient hybridization,
this study focused on evaluating the potential role of ancient polyploidization and
hybridization in Meconopsis’ evolutionary history. Our investigation based on the results
of reconstructed ancestral chromosome numbers using a Maximum Likelihood method
implemented in chromEvol showed that two extant Meconopsis sections (sect. Grandes
and sect. Primulinae) shared a triploid ancestor. We further examined the pattern of
hybridization in Meconopsis by reconstructing a nuclear marker GAPDH (glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene) network. The result, along with morphological,
phylogenetic, and cytological evidence, all point to a hybrid nature of the triploid
ancestor. Based on the resultant GAPDH network, an ancient reticulate evolution
scenario in Meconopsis is proposed. Overall, this preliminary study shows how an
ancient triploid event promoted polyploid evolution in Meconopsis and also exemplifies
how allotriploidization and successive polyploidization played an important role in
diversification of the genus.