Microscopic Characterization of the Cultivated and Wild Brassica Species: Cytological and Stomatal Analysis
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Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology
Abstract
The Brassicaceae family comprises a wide array of diploid,
amphidiploid, and wild species that serve as vital component for crop
improvement and understanding plant genome evolution. This genus
contains six different species in which there are three diploid species
(Brassica nigra (genome BB; 2n= 16), Brassica oleracea (genome
CC; 2n= 18) and Brassica rapa (genome AA; 2n=20) and three
amphidiploids (Brassica carinata (genome BBCC;2n=34), Brassica
juncea (genome AABB; 2n=36) and Brassica napus (genome AACC;
2n=38) species, which are derived from two diploid species. The
present study aimed to examine the cytological analysis and analyse
the stomatal features across 19 Brassica species, including both
cultivated and wild types. The mitosis analysis were done and the
chromosome number was counted for each species. The
chromosomal parameters were analysed for cultivated and wild
species and ideograms were preparade for respective species.
Secondly, the stomatal analysis was performed, including the
number of chloroplasts in each guard cell of leaf sample of each
species. Image-based measurements revealed that amphidiploid
species exhibited significantly higher chloroplast numbers and guard
cell dimensions compared to diploid and wild species. Two-way
ANOVA confirmed highly significant differences across species,
traits, and their interaction. The pearson’s correlation coefficient
(PCC) analysis showed that the chloroplast number is a marker for
ploidy estimation. The findings will contribute valuable insights into
Brassicaceae cytogenetics, supporting the application of these traits
in species differentiation, ploidy determination, and utilization of the
CWRs in Brassica crop improvement programs.
