Biologia Plantarum (Sep 2013)

Characterization and gene mapping of a chlorophyll-deficient mutant clm1 of Triticum monococcum L.

  • M. J. Ansari,
  • A. Al-Ghamdi,
  • R. Kumar,
  • S. Usmani,
  • Y. Al-Attal,
  • A. Nuru,
  • A. A. Mohamed,
  • K. Singh,
  • H. S. Dhaliwal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10535-013-0307-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 3
pp. 442 – 448

Abstract

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Diploid wheat Triticum monococcum L. is a model plant for wheat functional genomics. Chlorophyll-deficient mutant (clm1) was identified during manual screening of the ethyl methanesulphonate (EMS)-treated M2 progenies of T. monococcum accession pau14087 in the field. The clm1 mutant, due to significantly decreased chlorophyll content compared with the wild-type (WT), exhibited pale yellow leaves which slowly recovered to green before flowering. The clm1 mutant showed early flowering, reduced number of tillers, trichome length and density, and different shape as compared with the WT. At the same time, clm1 mutant culm had more chlorophyll-containing parenchymatous tissues compared to WT, presumably to absorb more sunlight for photosynthesis. Genetic analysis indicated that the clm1 mutation was monogenic recessive. The clm1 mutant was mapped between Xgwm473 and Xwmc96 SSR markers, with genetic distances of 2.1 and 2.6 cM, respectively, on the 7AmL chromosome.

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