Horticulturae (Nov 2022)

Identification of a Leafy Head Formation Related Gene in Chinese Cabbage (<i>Brassica rapa</i> L. ssp. <i>pekinensis</i>)

  • Yonghui Zhao,
  • Chuanhong Liu,
  • Bing Fang,
  • Shengnan Huang,
  • Nan Wang,
  • Chong Tan,
  • Jie Ren,
  • Hui Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/horticulturae8111086
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 1086

Abstract

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Leafy head formation is one of the most important characteristics of Chinese cabbage, and the process is regulated by a series of genes and environmental factors. In this study, a non-heading short leaf mutant slm was identified from an ethyl methane sulfonate mutagenesis (EMS) population of the heading Chinese cabbage line FT. The most significant phenotypic characteristics of slm was shortening leaves and increasing leaf numbers, which led to failure to form a leafy head. Genetic analysis showed that a single recessive gene Brslm was responsible for the mutant phenotype. Mutmap analysis suggested that Brslm was located on chromosome A07, and four candidate genes were predicted. KASP analysis demonstrated that BraA07g039390.3C was the target gene of the candidates. BraA07g039390.3C is a homologous to Arabidopsis CLV1 encoding receptor kinase with an extracellular leucine-rich domain. Sequencing analysis revealed that a single SNP from G to A occurred in 904th nucleotide of Brclv1, which resulted in the change of the 302nd amino acid from Asp to Asn. The SNP was co-segregated with the mutant phenotype in F2 individuals and located on the conserved domains. These results indicated that BrCLV1 was the mutant gene for slm which led to shortening leaves and increasing leaf numbers, disrupting the leafy heading formation in FT. These findings contribute to revealing the BrCLV1 function in leafy head formation in Chinese cabbage.

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