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Plant Physiology 43:1611-1616 (1968) © 1968 American Society of Plant Biologists Characteristics of a Virescent Cotton Mutant 1Plant Physiologist and Geneticist, Crops Research Division, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture and Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843
The virescent cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) mutant described here differs from normal cultivated cotton by a single mutation in the nucleus. The mutant exhibits nuclear control of chlorophyll and carotenoid development. Young leaves are distinctly yellow and become green with age. There is no unusual photometabolism of 14CO2 or 14C-acetate in this mutant. It is probable that the nuclear virescent mutation is in a locus concerned with making structural units. The yellow leaves do show a high photosynthetic capacity on a chlorophyll basis. At saturating light intensity the rate of CO2 fixation is 8 fold higher than the green control leaves. Thus, impaired pigment synthesis which could be lethal is offset by a high photosynthetic capacity in the virescent leaves.
1 This work was supported in part by the Cotton Producers Institute and the Cotton Genetics Regional Project S-1.
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