4.7 Article

Mapping of a thermo-sensitive earliness per se gene on Triticum monococcum chromosome 1Am

Journal

THEORETICAL AND APPLIED GENETICS
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 585-593

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s00122-002-0982-5

Keywords

earliness per se; diploid wheat; heading time; QTL mapping; temperature interaction

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An earliness per se gene, designated Eps-A(m)1, was mapped in diploid wheat in F-2 and single-seed descent mapping populations from the cross between cultivated (DV92) and wild (G3116) Triticum monococcum accessions. A QTL with a peak on RFLP loci Xcdo393 and Xwg241, the most distal markers on the long arm of chromosome 1A(m), explained 47% of the variation in heading date (LOD score 8.3). Progeny tests for the two F-2:3 families with critical recombination events between Xcdo393 and Xwg241 showed that the gene was distal to Xcdo393 and linked to Xwg241. Progeny tests and replicated experiments with line #3 suggested that Eps-A(m)1 was distal to Xwg241. This gene showed a large effect on heading date in the controlled environment experiments, and a smaller, but significant, effect under natural conditions. Eps-A(m)1 showed significant epistatic interactions with photoperiod and vernalization treatments, suggesting that the different classes of genes affecting heading date interact as part of a complex network that controls the timing of flowering induction. Besides its interactions with other genes affecting heading date, Eps-A(m)1 showed a significant interaction with temperature. The effect of temperature was larger in plants carrying the DV92 allele for late flowering than in those carrying the G3116 allele for early flowering. Average differences in heading date between the experiments performed at 16 T and 23 T were approximately I I days (P < 0.001) for the lines carrying the Eps-A(m)1 allele for early flowering but approximately 50 days (P < 0.0001) for the lines carrying the allele for late flowering. The large differences in heading time (average 80 days) observed between plants carrying the G3116 and DV92 alleles when grown at 16 degreesC, suggest that it would be possible to produce very detailed maps for this gene to facilitate its future positional cloning.

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