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Abstract

A tomato EST sequence, highly homologous to the human and Arabidopsis thaliana UV-damaged DNA binding protein 1 (DDB1), was mapped to the centromeric region of the tomato chromosome 2. This region was previously shown to harbor the HP-1 gene, encoding the high pigment-1 (hp-1) and the high pigment-1^sup w^ (hp-1^sup w^) mutant phenotypes. Recent results also show that the A. thaliana DDB1 protein interacts both genetically and biochemically with the protein encoded by DEETIOLATED1, a gene carrying three tomato mutations that are in many respects isophenotypic to hp-1: high pigment-2 (hp-2), high pigment-2^sup j^ (hp-2^sup j^) and dark green (dg). The entire coding region of the DDB1 gene was sequenced in an hp-1 mutant and its near-isogenic normal plant in the cv. Ailsa Craig background, and also in an hp-1^sup w^ mutant and its isogenic normal plant in the GT breeding line background. Sequence analysis revealed a single A^sup 931^-to-T^sup 931^ base transversion in the coding sequence of the DDB1 gene in the hp-1 mutant plants. This transversion results in the substitution of the conserved asparagine at position 311 to a tyrosine residue. In the hp-1^sup w^ mutant, on the other hand, a single G^sup 2392^-to-A^sup 2392^ transition was observed, resulting in the substitution of the conserved glutamic acid at position 798 to a lysine residue. The single nucleotide polymorphism that differentiates hp-1 mutant and normal plants in the cv. Ailsa Craig background was used to design a pyrosequencing genotyping system. Analysis of a resource F^sub 2^ population segregating for the hp-1 mutation revealed a very strong linkage association between the DDB1 locus and the photomorphogenic response of the seedlings, measured as hypocotyl length (25<LOD score<26, R^sup 2^=62.8%). These results strongly support the hypothesis that DDB1 is the gene encoding the hp-1 and hp-1^sup w^ mutant phenotypes.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
The tomato homolog of the gene encoding UV-damaged DNA binding protein 1 (DDB1) underlined as the gene that causes the high pigment-1 mutant phenotype
Author
Lieberman, Michal; Segev, Orit; Gilboa, Nehama; Lalazar, Avraham; Levin, Ilan
Pages
1574-81
Publication year
2004
Publication date
May 2004
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0040-5752
e-ISSN
1432-2242
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
821979420
Copyright
Springer-Verlag 2004