Crop Journal (Feb 2015)

Mapping the glaucousness suppressor Iw1 from wild emmer wheat “PI 481521”

  • Zongchang Xu ,
  • Cuiling Yuan ,
  • Jirui Wang ,
  • Daolin Fu ,
  • Jiajie Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cj.2014.09.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 37 – 45

Abstract

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Many species of Triticeae display a glaucous phenotype. In wheat, glaucousness/waxiness on spikes, leaves and shoots is controlled by wax production genes (W loci) and epistatic inhibitors (Iw loci). In this study, a suppressor of glaucousness from wild emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides) accession “PI 481521” was investigated in a pair of durum (T. turgidum ssp. durum cv. “Langdon”, LDN)—wild emmer wheat chromosome substitution lines, LDN and “LDNDIC521-2B”. Genetic analysis revealed that the non-glaucous phenotype of LDNDIC521-2B was controlled by the dominant glaucous suppressor Iw1 on the short arm of chromosome 2B. In total, 371 2B-specific marker differences were identified between LDN and LDNDIC521-2B. The location of the Iw1 gene was mapped using an F2 population that stemmed from LDN and LDNDIC521-2B, generating a partial linkage map that included 19 simple sequence repeats (SSR) and ten gene-based markers. On the current map, the Iw1 gene was located within the Xgwm614–BE498111 interval, and cosegregated with BQ788707, CD893659, CD927782, CD938589, and Xbarc35. Mapping of Iw1 in LDNDIC521-2B, a publically accessible and widely distributed line, will provide valuable information for marker-assisted selection of the agronomically important trait of glaucousness.

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