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Published in Crop Sci 32:28-35 (1992)
© 1992 Crop Science Society of America
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Genetic Analyses of Male Fertility Restoration in Wheat: V. Anomalous Results of a Monosomic Analysis

S. S. Maan*

Dep. of Crop and Weed Sciences, North Dakota State Univ., Fargo, ND 58105

* Corresponding author.

A fertile line (L222) of common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), with cytoplasm of T. timopheevii Zhu., and rfl and rf4 alleles of the major Rf genes on chromosomes 1A and 6B, respectively, was developed and analyzed for male fertility-restoring genes. L222 descended from 1 of the 11 partially fertile monosomics in the backcross progeny of cytoplasmic male-sterile (cms) Chris monosomic 1A/L22 (RflRfIrf4rf4), F1 monosomic lA//euploid Chris. Additional fertile monosomics were obtained from a second backcross of partially fertile monosomics in the F2 and F3 of the same cross. In their selfed progenies, monosomics and disomics were increasingly fertile, even though they were expected to have neither of the major Rf genes. L222 was analyzed for chromosomal location of Rf gene(s). A monosomic set of euplasmic ‘Chris’ and two tester stocks, cms ‘Era’ and cms Chris, were used for monosomic analysis. Plants were grown in a greenhouse at Fargo, ND. Results indicate that a major Rf gene was retained on chromosome 1A. An abnormally high incidence of univalent shift or contamination may explain the presence of Rfl on chromosome 1A of L222, but this was unlikely to occur in such a high frequency as to produce several fertile monosomics in three different backcross progenies. Two of the fertile monosomics were correctly identified as mono-lA by testcrossing them to Chris ditelosomic 1AS. Therefore, a hypothesis was proposed that a mutagenic (mtg) gene mutated rfl to Rfl in some of the plants that were monosomic for chromosome 1A. The original Rfl and the mutant Rfl are both located on the short arm of chromosome 1A, but allelism was not tested. The proposed genotypes of L222, Chris, and Era are RflRfl fifi, rflrfl FiFi; and RflRfl fifi, respectively.


Contribution from the Agric. Exp. Stn., North Dakota State Univ., Fargo. Research funded in part by USDA Res. Grant no. 59-2381-1-1-606-0 and CRCR1-1368. Article no. 1938

Received for publication October 22, 1990.





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