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Abstract

Male sterility has been widely used in hybrid seed production in Brassica, but not in B. rapa ssp. chinensis, and genetic models of male sterility for this subspecies are unclear. We discovered a spontaneous mutant in B. rapa ssp. chinensis. A series of progeny tests indicated that male sterility in B. rapa ssp. chinensis follows a three-allele model with BrMsa, BrMsb, and BrMsc. The male sterility locus has been mapped to chromosome A07 in BC1 and F2 populations through genotyping by sequencing. Fine mapping in a total of 1,590 F2 plants narrowed the male sterility gene BrMs to a 400 kb region, with two SNP markers only 0.3 cM from the gene. Comparative gene mapping shows that the Ms gene in B. rapa ssp. pekinensis is different from the BrMs gene of B. rapa ssp. chinensis, despite that both genes are located on chromosome A07. Interestingly, the DNA sequence orthologous to a male sterile gene in Brassica napus, BnRf, is within 400 kb of the BrMs locus. The BnRf orthologs of B. rapa ssp. chinensis were sequenced, and one KASP marker (BrMs_indel) was developed for genotyping based on a 14 bp indel at intron 4. Cosegregation of male sterility and BrMs_indel genotypes in the F2 population indicated that BnRf from B. napus and BrMs from B. rapa are likely to be orthologs. The BrMs_indel marker developed in this study will be useful in marker-assisted selection for the male sterility trait.

Details

Title
Genetic Analysis and Fine Mapping of a Spontaneously Mutated Male Sterility Gene in Brassica rapa ssp. chinensis
Author
Lin, Tzu-Kai 1 ; Lin, Ya-Ping 2 ; Shun-Fu, Lin 3 

 Department of Agronomy, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C. 10617; Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C 
 Crop Science Division, Taiwan Agricultural Research Institute, Taichung, Taiwan, R.O.C. 41362 
 Department of Agronomy, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C. 10617 
Pages
1309-1318
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Apr 1, 2020
Publisher
Oxford University Press
e-ISSN
21601836
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3169734532
Copyright
© 2020 Lin et al..