Abstract
Apomixis, the asexual reproduction through seeds, is thought to provide reproductive assurance when ploidy is not even and/or when population density is low. Therefore, apomicts are expected to be more abundant, and the frequency of apomictic offspring higher, at early stages of primary succession when mates are rare. To test this hypothesis, we sampled facultative apomictic Hieracium pilosella L. along the successional gradient on a glacier forefield and determined their ploidy, the level of apomixis in their offspring, and the genetic diversity of the entire meta-population and within subpopulations. We found that apomixis is more common in odd- and aneuploid cytotypes, which are more frequent at early stages of primary succession. However, apomixis was uncommon at all successional stages and sexual hexaploids were dominating throughout. Reproductive assurance was reflected in the higher fertility of all odd-ploid apomictic plants (3×, 5×) by avoiding meiosis, illustrating that apomixis provides an escape from sterility, as proposed by Darlington. Odd-ploid plants are supposedly better colonizers (Baker’s law), which is supported by their higher occurrence close to the glacier snout. Independent of succession, we found gene flow between apomicts and sexuals, which allows for the continuous creation of new apomictic and sexual genotypes. We conclude that apomixis in H. pilosella does indeed provide an escape from sterility, and therefore reproductive assurance, in aneuploid cytotypes. We further propose that apomixis preserves beneficial combinations of unlinked alleles in every generation for as long as apomictic genotypes persist in the population.
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Introduction
Apomixis can be viewed as a deregulation of sexual processes, resulting in asexual reproduction through seeds1,2,3,4. It modifies processes central to sexual reproduction5: Meiosis and thus segregation is avoided (apomeiosis), and because the embryo – and sometimes also the endosperm – develops without fertilization (parthenogenesis), there is no paternal genomic contribution to the offspring. As a consequence, apomictically formed seeds are clones that are genetically identical to the mother plant.
Because apomicts do not require a mate6, apomixis provides reproductive assurance in obligate outcrossing plant species6,7,8,9. Moreover, apomixis provides an escape from sterility when ploidy is not even and meiosis fails9. In such species, apomictic genotypes are predicted to be more efficient colonizers than sexual genotypes. This view is supported by the phenomenon of geographical parthenogenesis, which describes that apomictic cytotypes are geographically more widespread than sexual cytotypes10,11,12,13,14, and the finding that invasive alien species are often apomictic15,16,17.
Although apomicts have the advantage of reproductive assurance, they are thought to accumulate deleterious mutations18. Without meiosis, no mechanism exists to purge deleterious mutations from the genomic pool of a population. This results in a successive reduction in fitness and, eventually, genotypes that have reached a critical threshold of deleterious mutations go extinct, a process known as Muller’s ratchet18,19. These considerations led Darlington to propose that apomixis is an evolutionary dead end9.
Nonetheless, apomixis is found in over 400 species belonging to 46 plant families1. This could have two major reasons: First, apomixis is a facultative, quantitative trait1,20,21,22. This means that in populations of apomictic plants, also sexual individuals exist and that apomictic individuals have residual sexuality. This enables apomictic species to purge deleterious mutations from their genomic pool, because apomicts can also, to a certain degree, reproduce sexually. Second, male sporogenesis and gametogenesis are usually unaffected in apomicts1,23. During male sporogenesis, apomixis loci can segregate, producing pollen that transmit genes conferring apomixis. Thus, pollen from an apomict can fertilize an apomictic (with residual sexuality) or a sexual genotype, generating new apomictic and sexual genotypes among the progeny1,21,22,24. As new apomictic genotypes arise from sexual reproduction, apomixis is not lost as a trait. Together, these two mechanisms provide an explanation for the high genetic variation found in apomictic populations15,25,26,27. Van Dijk and colleagues22 described this as the “apomixis gene’s view”, stating that apomixis persists as a trait in genotypes purged from deleterious mutations.
We chose Hieracium pilosella L. (mouse-ear hawkweed), a natural apomict, to study the ecological dynamics of apomixis during primary succession, i.e., the early stages of colonization of bare soil after a glacier retreat. Hieracium pilosella’s endosperm development is autonomous, i.e., independent of fertilization, complying with the assumption of an advantage when possible mates are rare (conditional advantage), due to reproductive assurance6,7,8,9. Furthermore, apomictic and sexual genotypes can have the same ploidy level, which ranges from 3 C to 8 C (1 C = one haploid genome)28. A further asset is that in Hieracium subgenus pilosella two loci, LOSS OF APOMEIOSIS (LOA) and LOSS OF PARTHENOGENESIS (LOP), have been shown to be required for apomixis4,29,30. The model of two independent loci explains the occurrence of four different offspring types24. The four offspring types are distinguished by the number of genome copies inherited from the mother and from the father, respectively. For example, offspring type 2n + n (BIII hybrid) means that two copies were inherited from the mother and one from the father31,32. LOA and LOP control two elements of apomixis, both of which are required to produce maternal clones (2n + 0, Fig. 1). If only LOA is present, meiosis is omitted but embryogenesis requires fertilization, leading to an increase in ploidy and paternal genomic contribution (Fig. 1). The resulting 2n + n offspring is thus generated through a mixture of apomictic and sexual processes. The same is true if only LOP is present, leading to offspring with reduced ploidy (n + 0, polyhaploid, Fig. 1), which is the result of meiosis and parthenogenesis, a sexual and an apomictic process, respectively. If both loci are absent, sexual reproduction occurs, leading to n + n offspring (Fig. 1). Because 2n + n, n + 0, and 2n + 0 offspring types need at least one element of apomixis for their formation, we consider them as apomictically produced offspring. In short, H. pilosella provides a system in which we have a good understanding of the genetic basis of apomixis and the formation of different cytotypes, allowing inferences about the processes that led to the formation of a specific individual.
To investigate the dynamics of apomixis and sexual reproduction, we sampled H. pilosella along a primary successional gradient on the Morteratsch glacier forefield in the Swiss Alps. Hieracium pilosella occurs throughout the Morteratsch glacier forefield, except at the very earliest successional stage (Sailer C, personal observation). The Morteratsch forefield has a very well documented chrono-sequence of the glacial retreat33,34. Moreover, because of the flat topography of the forefield, we do not expect confounding influences of changes in altitude, exposition, or disturbances by avalanches and landslides on the primary successional gradient. These unique features make the Morteratsch glacier forefield a particularly well-suited model for a case study on the dynamics of apomixis along the chrono-sequence of primary succession.
We addressed the following questions concerning hypotheses of reproductive assurance of apomixis in H. pilosella in the glacier forefield: (1) What cytotypes of H. pilosella occur along the Morteratsch glacier forefield and do they differ with respect to their reproductive mode? (2) Does the relative frequency of the four possible offspring types differ between occurring cytotypes and are these frequencies influenced by the succession? In other words, does the frequency of apomicts and their level of apomixis change along the glacier forefield? (3) How have different cytotypes with different reproductive modes arisen and do they differ in their fertility?
Results
Cytotypes are unequally distributed along the successional gradient
Of the 153 H. pilosella plants we analyzed, 139 were hexaploids. For 14 plants, we were unable to assign a ploidy level based on flow cytometry. Nine of these had DNA contents between penta- and hexaploids, and five between tri- and tetraploid. Since we are unable to assign a clear ploidy level, we refer to those plants as aneuploid for simplicity. Those two cytotypes (hexa- and aneuploid) were not equally distributed along the successional gradient (2-way interaction, F1, 23 = 4.8, P = 0.039).
We found 126 plants to be sexual and 27 to be apomictic (18%), disclosing that the population on the glacier forefield consists of two reproductive types. The abundance of apomictic individuals does not change along the succession (F1, 5 = 2.05, P = 0.226, Fig. 2a; hexaploids only: F1, 5 = 0.057, P = 0.823, Fig. 2b). H. pilosella grows in patches, often of mixed ploidy, but the majority of patches (35 of 55) we analyzed consisted solely of sexual individuals. When considering the ecological unit of a patch, we found that the frequency of apomicts within the patches decreases towards older successional stages (F1, 53 = 3.94, P = 0.052, Fig. 2c). However, this pattern is driven by 11 individuals in 4 patches. If only hexaploid individuals are considered, we did not find this trend (F1, 52 = 0.069, P = 0.794, Fig. 2d).
The frequency of offspring types involving at least one element of apomixis is highest close to the glacier snout
From the total 1,231 seeds analyzed, 1,166 were n + n (sexual), 15 were 2n + n (BIII hybrid, mixed developmental pathways), and 50 were 2n + 0 (apomictic, maternal clones). We did not find a single n + 0 (polyhaploid) offspring (Fig. 3), indicating a bias against this specific mixed sexual (meiosis) and apomictic (parthenogenesis) developmental pathway.
The frequency of the three occurring offspring types was mainly determined by the cytotype, i.e. ploidy of the mother plant (for 2n + 0: F1, 1 = 7.1, P = 0.015). In other words, aneuploid cytotypes had the highest frequency of apomictic offspring. Notably, apomictic hexaploid plants had a low frequency of apomictic offspring in general (14.4%), and sexual offspring prevailed in hexaploids (Fig. 4). The amount of residual sexuality varied among apomictic hexaploid mother plants (Fig. 4), illustrating the facultative nature of apomixis in H. pilosella.
Plotting the 27 apomictic plants in relation to the successional stage and the cytotype/ploidy of their mother plant revealed that the frequency of the three offspring types was unequally distributed along the succession and depended on the ploidy of the mother plant (Fig. 5). In particular, sexual (n + n) offspring from hexaploid plants were found throughout the successional gradient with a higher frequency at later stages (Fig. 5a). On the other hand, odd-ploid cytotypes had a high frequency of 2n + n and 2n + 0 offspring. Interestingly, one pentaploid plant had the highest frequency of 2n + n offspring (Fig. 5b), indicating the necessity of apomeiosis to produce seeds in odd-ploid plants. Plants with a DNA content between triploid and tetraploid produced only 2n + 0 offspring (maternal clones, Fig. 4). Remarkably, they were only found close to the glacier snout, at the earliest successional stage at which H. pilosella occurs (Fig. 5c). In other words, the pattern of decreasing abundance of apomictic plants in the course of succession is driven by the unequal distribution of cytotypes.
Genetic exchange occurs frequently between apomicts and sexuals
The overall genetic diversity of H. pilosella on the glacier forefield was Dγ = 14.11 (Supplementary Datasets 1 to 5). The diversity of the two subpopulations was Dapomicts = 11.27 and Dsexuals = 13.72 (Table 1). Dβ was 1.08 (Table 1), indicating that apomictic and sexual plants cross frequently. Furthermore, we did not detect a subpopulation structure in hexaploid plants along the successional gradient (Dβ = 1.51, Table 2), except for the apomeiosis-associated marker LOA267 (Dβ = 2.49, Table 2).
Apomictic and sexual plants did not differ in their number of ovules (fecundity; F1, 151 = 0.09, P = 0.765, Fig. 6a; hexaploids only: F1, 137 = 0.08, P = 0.772, Fig. 6b), but apomictic plants had a slightly higher fertility than sexuals (F1, 151 = 3.6, P = 0.059), which was independent of succession (Fig. 6c). However, the difference in fertility is driven by the odd- and aneuploid cytotypes occurring preferentially at earlier successional stages (hexaploids only: F1, 137 = 2.59, P = 0.110, Fig. 6d).
Discussion
Different cytotypes are unequally distributed along the primary succession
We found aneuploid (no clear assignment of ploidy level using flow cytometry), and hexaploid cytotypes on the Morteratsch glacier forefield, and both cytotypes produced offspring involving elements of apomixis (2n + n, 2n + 0), referred to as apomictic offspring for simplicity. However, the majority of plants were hexaploid and produced solely sexual offspring (n + n). The identification of both sexual and apomictic offspring in the same hexaploid individuals confirms the facultative nature of apomixis in H. pilosella. These results are in concordance with earlier cytogeographic studies, which demonstrated the frequent occurrence of hexaploids in the Swiss Alps and described them as facultatively apomictic1,35,36.
Even though hexaploid plants prevailed throughout the succession, aneuploid cytotypes were unequally distributed. Cytotypes with low DNA content only occurred at early stages of succession, likely because competitive growth is dependent on ploidy, with plants of lower ploidy being weak competitors37. We see hexaploids as being the more versatile cytotype in H. pilosella as they prevail throughout the succession and, therefore, can grow under a wide range of competitive biotic conditions.
Although only 18% of the plants were found to be apomicts, they were more frequent at early stages of succession, at which a lower density of potential mating partners is expected. For insect pollinated plants such as H. pilosella, mating partner density is determined by the area that is visited by a single insect. Flower visits are less frequent at early than at late stages of succession38, showing that mating partner density is low at early stages. While this pattern is observed if all cytotypes are analyzed together, it disappears if only hexaploid individuals are analyzed. In other words, the higher abundance of apomicts at early stages is driven by the higher abundance of aneuploid cytotypes.
Therefore, our finding of a higher frequency of apomicts at early stages of succession does not comply with Tomlinson’s model6, which states that selfing is prevailing when mating partner densities are low, and its interpretation that apomicts have a conditional advantage when mating partner density is low.
The frequency of apomictic offspring is mainly influenced by ploidy level
We found a continuous variation of the frequency of apomictic offspring (residual sexuality) in hexaploid individuals, confirming that apomixis can be viewed as a facultative, quantitative trait even in predominantly sexual cytotypes. The high frequency of sexual offspring is in concordance with the sexual developmental pathway being the default in Hieracium spp.4, supporting the view of apomixis as an acquired gain-of-function trait.
Furthermore, we found that different cytotypes produced different ratios of the four possible offspring types. Plants with the lowest DNA content (<tetraploid) solely produced 2n + 0 offspring and plants with a DNA content between penta- and hexaploid 2n + n offspring, respectively. The ‘2n’ indicates the apomeiotic origin of these offspring (Fig. 1), which complies with plants of odd ploidy or aneuploidy being able to produce seeds only if meiosis is avoided1,15,23,26,30,39. The avoidance of meiosis provides an escape from sterility, as Darlington stated9, a view that is supported by our results because the vast majority of offspring were of apomeiotic origin in these aneuploid plants. They themselves, however, are likely the product of the n + 0 offspring type.
In general, we found low levels of apomixis on the glacier forefield (18%), indicating little advantage for apomicts during primary succession. The observed low level of apomixis is in concordance with earlier findings on apomictic species in the nival zone of the Alps40. However, H. pilosella plants are capable of reproducing via vegetative stolons. Like apomixis, this enables clonal reproduction, both for apomictic and sexual genotypes, although offspring number and dispersal distance are limited. We speculate that the general advantage of apomicts in H. pilosella is confounded by clonal reproduction via aboveground stolons of both sexuals and apomicts.
Another deduction from Tomlinson’s model6 is that apomicts at early stages of succession should have a high frequency of apomictic offspring. Indeed, we found more apomictic offspring (2n + 0, 2n + n) near the glacier snout. However, only aneuploid cytotypes had a high frequency of apomictic offspring, and different cytotypes are not equally distributed along the primary succession as described above. Our results suggest that the decrease in frequency of apomictic offspring as succession proceeds is primarily driven by the decrease in the frequency of cytotypes that produce high levels of apomictic offspring. Together with the high variability of the frequency of offspring types in hexaploid plants, we conclude that the level of apomixis is mainly determined by the genetic factors ploidy and reproductive type.
Apomixis provides a source of beneficial allele combinations in the formation of new cytotypes
Figure 1 illustrates that combining sexual and apomictic developmental pathways results in a change of ploidy and can explain the generation and occurrence of different cytotypes. However, progeny from such mixed developmental pathways are expected to be rare24. Indeed, we found not a single n + 0 offspring among more than 1,200 seeds screened. Moreover, we would expect a strong selection pressure against decreasing ploidy, as two genome copies are the minimum for successful meiosis and (partial) hemizygosity can uncover deleterious alleles. As a consequence, genotypes that mainly produce n + 0 offspring will be selected against, which is likely the reason why we did not find a single n + 0 offspring in the field. Such negative selection is not expected for 2n + n offspring, which results in a ploidy increase.
Despite the rarity of n + 0 offspring, we found two patches of plants with a DNA content that was close to triploid. These can only arise from n + 0 offspring, as most of the plants in the Morteratsch population are hexaploid. We consider each of these two patches to be a rare developmental and demographic event, as the n + 0 offspring bearing seed had to germinate and survive until maturity and reproduction. Taken together, we interpret this observation as support for Baker’s law, which states that a single individual which is capable of self-reproduction, is sufficient to found a new population7.
The high frequency of sexual offspring (n + n) in hexaploid apomicts throughout the succession hints towards frequent genetic exchange. Based on genetic diversity data, we found that apomicts and sexuals behaved like a single population (Dβ close to 1), suggesting random mating between individuals with different modes of reproduction. This enables the generation of new apomictic and sexual cytotypes and supports the ‘apomixis gene’s view’22 while contradicting Darlington’s ‘dead end of evolution’ hypothesis9, at least for as long as facultative sexuality exists in this species.
Apomixis fixes genotypes and if an apomictic genotype is successful in the sense of growth and reproduction, beneficial allele combinations are frozen. These allele combinations are provided in every generation to the population’s genomic pool via gene flow between apomicts and sexuals. In contrast to sexual reproduction, the beneficial allele combinations of successful apomictic genotypes, which can cover large parts of the genome, are not broken down by recombination. We propose that apomixis preserves successful genotypes, which can repeatedly serve as a source of beneficial combinations of unlinked alleles in every generation for as long as the genotype persists in the population.
We estimated genetic diversity along the succession by assuming six subpopulations corresponding to the six time windows sampled. As we found no strong differentiation among the subpopulations from different time windows on the glacier forefield, based on neutral SSR markers (Dβ close to 1), we conclude that the genetic exchange (gene flow) along the successional gradient is high. In contrast, the presumably non-neutral LOA267 marker, which is associated with apomeiosis, showed low diversity at early stages of succession and the Dβ value suggests 2–3 subpopulations. Taken together, this suggests a cline along the successional gradient, pointing towards less genetic diversity near the apomeiosis locus at early stages of succession, in which apomicts are more frequent. The lower diversity at this non-neutral marker is a signature of selection for apomeiosis at these early stages, further supporting a selective advantage of apomixis at early stages of succession. Because recombination around the locus controlling apomeiosis is suppressed in most apomicts5, LOA267 likely reflects the segregation of a larger genomic region. However, given the current genotyping methods for H. pilosella and the yet unidentified genes conferring apomixis, interpretations based on the LOA267 marker alone remain speculative.
Conclusions
We found a higher frequency of apomictic H. pilosella at early stages of primary succession on the Morteratsch glacier forefield. This higher frequency is due to the higher abundance of aneuploid cytotypes that do have the highest level of apomixis in this meta-population. Apomixis does provide an escape from sterility and reproductive assurance for such cytotypes, which themselves are likely to be the product of an apomictic developmental pathway. We conclude that the primary conditional advantage for apomicts is not necessarily the low density of potential mates but rather the escape from sterility for odd- and aneuploid cytotypes.
Materials and Methods
Model species and sampling
Hieracium pilosella L. is a self-incompatible, perennial, monocarpic, stoloniferous, herbaceous species. It usually grows in patches of individual plants (rosettes). When rosettes reach a threshold size, they reproduce vegetatively via aboveground stolons and through seeds by producing a single flower head on a stem41. Hieracum pilosella occurs in ploidy levels from 3C to 8C, with 5C cytotypes found at the margins of its geographical occurrence and 6 C cytotypes being found throughout Europe, predominantly in the Alps (84% in Switzerland)42. Although H. pilosella is an obligate outcrosser, self-pollen germinates if non-self-pollen is also present on the stigma (mentor effect)35.
In preparation for sampling, the whole Morteratsch glacier forefield of ca. 1.5 km2 was searched for occurrence of H. pilosella and the positions of 912 patches were marked with GPS (GPSmap 60CS, Garmin, Garching, Germany) to an accuracy of 5 m. The positions were transferred to the topographical Swiss map (Topo Schweiz V1, Garmin, Garching, Germany) using the MapSource software (Garmin, Garching, Germany). The map with the marked positions was printed and the data of the chrono-sequence of deglaciation, dating back to 1857 when the Morteratsch glacier had its maximal extent43, was constructed based on a published map34. The glacier forefield was then sub-divided into six twenty-year time windows (51, 71, 91, 111, 131, and 154 years after deglaciation). Patches of H. pilosella lying on the isochronal lines, i.e., lines connecting the glacial front at certain years, as published by Burga and colleagues34, were dismissed. Per time window, ten patches of H. pilosella on each side of the river were randomly selected for sampling. From each of these patches, we aimed at collecting six reproducing plants. Sometimes, we could not find six flowering plants per patch and sampled all occurring reproducing plants in the patch instead. Furthermore, some seed samples were lost. For analysis, we only used plants from which we could sample DNA from leaves and seeds. Leaves for DNA analysis and seeds from flower heads could be collected from 234 mother plants, coming from 74 patches. In July 2011, the two youngest leaves of each individual were sampled for ploidy determination and DNA extraction. One leaf was shock-frozen in a vapor-shipper (SC 4/2 V, MVE Biomedical, Georgia, USA). The tip of the second leaf was placed in a 1.2 mL cluster tube (Thermo Scientific, Wohlen, Switzerland) containing 50 µL of mQ water (conductivity > 18 MΩ−1) and one 3 mm stainless steel bead (Schieritz & Hauenstein AG, Zwingen, Switzerland), and stored in a cooling bag. Closed capitula from the same plants were bagged using individually marked tea filters for seed collection. In August 2011, the individually marked tea filters containing the seeds were collected and placed in plastic containers containing silica gel to ensure fast drying of the seed material. Seeds were stored at 4 °C, 30% humidity until used.
DNA extraction and genetic diversity estimation
DNA was extracted from the sampled leaves of mother plants using the DNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen, Hombrechtikon, Switzerland), following the manufacturer’s instructions. Samples were eluted in 2 × 50 µL AE buffer.
We used markers for LOA and LOP29,44, as well as SSR markers for H. pilosella45, to estimate overall genetic diversity of the entire meta-population on the glacier forefield (Supplementary Datasets 1 to 5). All primer pairs were tested and optimized for our samples. SSR markers were resolved on the high-resolution cartridge of the Qiaxcel system (Qiagen, Hombrechtikon, Switzerland). Three SSR markers and one LOA marker were highly polymorphic and reproducible, and could be used for genetic diversity estimation using Shannon’s entropy46. For individuals that showed a reproducible allelic pattern, we calculated Hγ as the overall genetic diversity of the Morteratsch population. We considered apomicts and sexuals or the samples from the six different time windows as subpopulations. Using apomicts and sexuals as subpopulations, we could test for gene flow between the individuals of different modes of reproduction. Using the individuals from the six time windows as subpopulations, we could test for changes of genetic diversity along the primary succession. Hα was computed as the mean diversity of the subpopulations. Hβ was computed as Hγ minus Hα. Hβ is interpreted as the number of subpopulations present in the population, based on genetic diversity. Thus, if apomicts and sexuals are genetically isolated populations, we expect Hβ = 2, while if they are genetically a single population, we expect Hβ = 146. If there are genetic subpopulations along the primary succession, we expect Hβ ≥ 2 for the six different time windows (maximum Hβ = 6). We present diversity (D) instead of entropy (H), which is the exponent of the entropy (D = eH), and corresponds to the number of markers found.
Ploidy analysis of mother plants and flow cytometric seed screen (apomixis vs. sexual ratio)
The ploidy level of the sampled mother plants was determined by ploidy analysis using flow cytometry within 48 h after collection of the leaf samples, following the two-step method described by Dolezel and colleagues47 with minor modifications. A small piece of a Bellis perennis (1.72 pg DNA per nucleus) leaf was added as internal standard to the collected leaf material, which was in 50 µL water. 50 µL of 0.2 M citric acid (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland), 0.01% Triton X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) was added to a total volume of 100 µL, and the leaf material was disrupted by shaking it 2 times for 30 sec at 30 Hz using a mixer-mill (MM300, Retsch, Haan, Germany). After bead-beating 100 µL of 0.1 M citric acid (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland), 1% Triton X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) were added and mixed by inverting the plates to achieve a concentration of 0.1 M citric acid and ca. 0.5% Triton-X-100 in a total volume of 200 µL. The solution was filtered through fritted deep well plates (Nunc, Thermo Scientific, Wohlen, Switzerland) into 96-well V-bottom plates (Sarstedt, Numbrecht, Germany). Nuclei were collected by centrifugation at 150 g for 5 min at 20 °C (Centrifuge 5810 R, Eppendorf, Schönebuch, Switzerland). The supernatant was removed and nuclei were resuspended in 40 µL 0.1 M citric acid, 0.5% Triton X-100. 160 µL of staining solution [0.4 M Na2HPO4 (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), 5.5 µg/mL 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; Invitrogen, Eugene, Oregon), and 0.2 µL/mL 2-mercaptoethanol (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany)] were added 2 min prior to analysis by flow cytometer robotics (Quanta SC MPL, Beckman-Coulter, Nyon, Switzerland). The run was stopped at a count of 6000 in the defined sample region or latest after 3:40 min runtime. As the haploid (1 C) DNA content of B. perennis and H. pilosella is the same48, the ploidy of samples could be calculated by dividing the median of the H. pilosella peak by the median of the B. perennis peak and multiplied by 2, to account for diploidy of the B. perennis internal standard. We considered individuals with a Cx ≥ 5.8 as hexaploid. The protocol and analysis were set up and optimized with tetraploid H. pilosella plants, the ploidy of which was confirmed by chromosome counts (courtesy of Jan Suda, Department of Botany, Charles University and Institue of Botany, Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic).
The flow cytometric seed screen49 to determine the ploidy of the embryo and of the endosperm followed essentially the same procedure50. Single seeds were put into 1.2 mL cluster tubes (Thermo Scientific, Wohlen, Switzerland) containing one 3 mm stainless steel bead (Schieritz & Hauenstein AG, Zwingen, Switzerland). 80 µL of 0.1 M citric acid (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland), 0.1% Triton X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) were added. Seeds were disrupted by shaking them 2 times for 3 min at 30 Hz in a mixer mill. The internal B. perennis standard was produced separately from the seeds and used to resuspend the nuclei of the samples. We screened up to 12 seeds per mother plant. This enabled us to detect as low as 8% apomixis per plant. Plants scored as sexual have therefore operationally less than 8% apomixis. In total, we screened 1,830 seeds coming from 197 individuals.
Developmental origin of the seeds (apomixis vs. sexual ratio)
The ratios of the ploidies of (1) endosperm to embryo and (2) embryo to mother plant were used for a linear discriminant analysis (LDA) to assign the developmental origin of the seeds to the four offspring types (n + n, 2n + n, n + 0, 2n + 0, Fig. 1). As training set we used manually annotated data from a different experiment (Sailer et al., unpublished data). Datasets were considered to be of sufficient quality if the half peak coefficient of variance (HPCV) < 5% for the ploidy of the mother, and HPCV < 7% for the ploidy of the embryo. Only datasets of sufficient quality were included in the analysis. We used a higher HPCV value as cutoff in the seed screen because the histograms from seeds from the field are noisier than the histograms from leaves. Furthermore, we excluded all individuals from which we had results of sufficient quality from only one seed. The final dataset contained data from 1,231 seeds derived from 153 individual mother plants. In general, we observed a lower than expected embryo:endosperm ratio for 2n + 0 seeds, which we speculate might be due to DNA degradation during seed storage or chromosomal loss during autonomous endosperm development. As not a single n + 0 type offspring was identified, some 2n + 0 offspring were mis-assigned. Therefore, the n + 0 were removed from the training set and the LDA repeated (Supplementary Fig. 1). The LDA had a wrong assignment rate of 3.4% (Supplementary Fig. 1).
Statistical analyses
First, we tested the effects of succession, position in the patch (extrinsic factors), and ploidy of the mother plant (intrinsic factor) on the frequency of apomicts, the frequency of the four offspring types, fecundity (number of ovules), and fertility (number of mature seeds/number of ovules) of the mother plant. Second, in a separate analysis, we tested the effect of succession on the ploidy of the mother plant. For all response variables, except ploidy of the mother plant, we used the F-test in ANOVA on generalized linear models (glm), which were first fitted in the order of intrinsic factors, followed by environmental (extrinsic) factors. For testing the effects of succession and patch-position on the ploidy of the mother plant, we used a linear model. By backward elimination of non-significant terms, with keeping variables if they were part of significant interactions, we arrived at the final model. We used the family function “quasibinomial” for over- and underdispersed data with the canonical link function “logit”. Furthermore, the model was weighted by the total number of analyzed individual plants or seeds. In case of interactions, we conservatively tested the corresponding term against the interaction term, instead of against the residual term. All statistical analyses were carried out in R51. Graphs were produced using the ggplot2 package52 and the grid package51.
Data availability
All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in the article’s Supplementary Information files.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Nuno Pires and Roger Schmid (University of Zurich) for help with fieldwork and Christian Mavris (University of Zurich) for supplying isochrone data for map construction. We further thank Alain Held and Seraina Camenisch for sorting and counting seeds. We are grateful to Joana Bernardes de Assis, Anja Herrmann, Sofia Magarida Nobre, Philipp Schlüter, and Anja Schmidt (University of Zurich), as well as Andrew Lloyd (Aberystwyth University) and Levi Yant (University of Nottingham) for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by the University of Zurich and a PSC-Syngenta Fellowship Project of the Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center to J.S. and U.G.
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U.G. and J.S. conceived and supervised the project, C.S., J.S., and U.G. designed experiments and methodology, C.S. collected and analyzed the data, U.G., J.S., and C.S. wrote the manuscript.
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Sailer, C., Stöcklin, J. & Grossniklaus, U. Dynamics of apomictic and sexual reproduction during primary succession on a glacier forefield in the Swiss Alps. Sci Rep 10, 8269 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-64367-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-64367-9
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