Assessing the likelihood of gene flow from sugarcane (Saccharum Hybrids) to wild relatives in South Africa

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Date
2018Author
Snyman, Sandy J.
Komape, Dennis M.
Khanyi, Hlobisile
Van den Berg, Johnnie
Cilliers, Dirk
Barnard, Sandra
Siebert, Stefan J.
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Pre-commercialization studies on environmental biosafety of genetically modified (GM)
crops are necessary to evaluate the potential for sexual hybridization with related
plant species that occur in the release area. The aim of the study was a preliminary
assessment of factors that may contribute to gene flow from sugarcane (Saccharum
hybrids) to indigenous relatives in the sugarcane production regions of Mpumalanga
and KwaZulu-Natal provinces, South Africa. In the first instance, an assessment
of Saccharum wild relatives was conducted based on existing phylogenies and
literature surveys. The prevalence, spatial overlap, proximity, distribution potential, and
flowering times of wild relatives in sugarcane production regions based on the above,
and on herbaria records and field surveys were conducted for Imperata, Sorghum,
Cleistachne, and Miscanthidium species. Eleven species were selected for spatial
analyses based on their presence within the sugarcane cultivation region: four species in
the Saccharinae and seven in the Sorghinae. Secondly, fragments of the nuclear internal
transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the 5.8s ribosomal gene and two chloroplast genes,
ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase (rbcL), and maturase K (matK) were sequenced or
assembled from short read data to confirm relatedness between Saccharum hybrids and
its wild relatives. Phylogenetic analyses of the ITS cassette showed that the closest wild
relative species to commercial sugarcane were Miscanthidium capense, Miscanthidium
junceum, and Narenga porphyrocoma. Sorghum was found to be more distantly related
to Saccharumthan previously described. Based on the phylogeny described in our study,
the only species to highlight in terms of evolutionary divergence times from Saccharum
are those within the genus Miscanthidium, most especially M. capense, and M. junceum
which are only 3 million years divergent from Saccharum. Field assessment of pollen
viability of 13 commercial sugarcane cultivars using two stains, iodine potassium iodide
(IKI) and triphenyl tetrazolium chloride, showed decreasing pollen viability (from 85 to 0%)
from the north to the south eastern regions of the study area. Future work will include
other aspects influencing gene flow such as cytological compatibility and introgression
between sugarcane and Miscanthidium species
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/28102https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2018.00072
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2018.00072/full