Genetic mapping and comparative analysis of seven mutants related to seed fiber development in cotton

被引:0
作者
Junkang Rong
Gary J. Pierce
Vijay N. Waghmare
Carl J. Rogers
Aparna Desai
Peng W. Chee
O. Lloyd May
John R. Gannaway
Jonathan F. Wendel
Thea A. Wilkins
Andrew H. Paterson
机构
[1] University of Georgia,Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory
[2] University of Georgia,Department of Crop and Soil Sciences
[3] University of Georgia,Coastal Plains Experiment Station
[4] Texas A&M Research and Extension Center,Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology
[5] Iowa State University,Department of Plant Sciences
[6] University of California,undefined
来源
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005年 / 111卷
关键词
Cotton Fiber; Seed Cotton; Fiber Development; Tetraploid Cotton; Seed Cotton Yield;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mapping of genes that play major roles in cotton fiber development is an important step toward their cloning and manipulation, and provides a test of their relationships (if any) to agriculturally-important QTLs. Seven previously identified fiber mutants, four dominant (Li1, Li2, N1 and Fbl) and three recessive (n2, sma-4(ha), and sma-4(fz)), were genetically mapped in six F2 populations comprising 124 or more plants each. For those mutants previously assigned to chromosomes by using aneuploids or by linkage to other morphological markers, all map locations were concordant except n2, which mapped to the homoeolog of the chromosome previously reported. Three mutations with primary effects on fuzz fibers (N1, Fbl, n2) mapped near the likelihood peaks for QTLs that affected lint fiber productivity in the same populations, perhaps suggesting pleiotropic effects on both fiber types. However, only Li1 mapped within the likelihood interval for 191 previously detected lint fiber QTLs discovered in non-mutant crosses, suggesting that these mutations may occur in genes that played early roles in cotton fiber evolution, and for which new allelic variants are quickly eliminated from improved germplasm. A close positional association between sma-4(ha), two leaf and stem-borne trichome mutants (t1, t2), and a gene previously implicated in fiber development, sucrose synthase, raises questions about the possibility that these genes may be functionally related. Increasing knowledge of the correspondence of the cotton and Arabidopsis genomes provides several avenues by which genetic dissection of cotton fiber development may be accelerated.
引用
收藏
页码:1137 / 1146
页数:9
相关论文
共 179 条
[1]  
Applequist WL(2001)Comparative development of fiber in wild and cultivated cotton Evol Dev 3 3-17
[2]  
Cronn R(2004)Functional genomics of cell elongation in developing cotton fibers Plant Mol Bio 54 911-929
[3]  
Wendel JF(1984)Development of the cotton fiber Int Rev Cytol 89 65-113
[4]  
Arpat A(1977)Fiber production in vitro from a conditional fiberless mutant of cotton Dev Biol 57 234-237
[5]  
Waugh M(2003)Unravelling angiosperm genome evolution by phylogenetic analysis of chromosomal duplication events Nature 422 433-438
[6]  
Sullivan JP(2002)Rapid diversification of the cotton genus (Gossypium : Malvaceae) revealed by analysis of sixteen nuclear and chloroplast genes Am J Bot 89 707-725
[7]  
Gonzales M(1980)Identification of ten chromosome deficiencies in cotton J Hered 71 45-48
[8]  
Frisch D(1963)Morphology of the base of seed hairs of Gossypium Bot Gaz 124 196-199
[9]  
Main D(1929)Occurrence of lintless cotton plants and the inheritance of the character ‘lintless’ J Amer Soc Agron 21 711-717
[10]  
Wood T(2004)Genetic mapping of EST-derived microsatellites from the diploid Gossypium arboreum in allotetraploid cotton Mol Gen Genet 272 308-327