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Plant Physiology 88:102-108 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

Preliminary Genetic Studies of the Phenotype of Betaine Deficiency in Zea mays L. 1

David Rhodes and Patrick J. Rich

Center for Plant Environmental Stress Physiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, Department of Horticulture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Glycinebetaine-deficient inbreds of Zea mays do not exhibit a general deficiency of nitrogenous solutes; the total free amino acid levels of betaine-deficient lines are not significantly less than those of inbreds which exhibit >100-fold higher betaine levels. Betaine-deficient inbreds are characterized by extremely low betaine: total free amino acid ratios (<0.0015). Highly significant correlations are demonstrated between the expected mid-parent and observed betaine:amino acid ratios of 30 hybrids of known pedigree. In 12 hybrids constructed from a betaine-deficient male parent (inbred 1506), the observed betaine:amino acid ratios of the hybrids are proportional to the betaine:amino acid ratios of the female parents (r = 0.83). Two hybrids, 1146 x 1074 and 1146 x 1506, were chosen for further genetic analysis. The common female parent (1146) and inbred 1074 both exhibit betaine:amino acid ratios of 0.090, a value which is approximately 90-fold greater than the betaine:amino acid ratio of inbred 1506. Hybrid 1146 x 1074 exhibits almost exactly twice the betaine:amino acid ratio of hybrid 1146 x 1506. If inbred 1506 is homozygous recessive for a single nuclear gene responsible for the phenotype of betaine deficiency, and if inbreds 1146 and 1074 are homozygous dominant for this allele, then this twofold difference in betaine:amino acid ratio must be associated with the homozygous dominant and heterozygous conditions, respectively, for 1146 x 1074 and 1146 x 1506. Evidence is presented from both greenhouse and field evaluations of F2 populations of these hybrids that a single nuclear recessive gene is most likely responsible for the phenotype of betaine-deficiency in inbred 1506. Approximately 25% of the F2 segregants from 1146 x 1506 exhibited extremely low betaine:amino acid ratios (<0.0015), whereas 0% of the F2 segregants from 1146 x 1074 exhibited this phenotype. The segregation patterns with respect to betaine:amino acid ratio suggest a 1:2:1 segregation ratio for homozygous recessive:heterozygous:homozygous dominant individuals within the 1146 x 1506-F2 population.


1 Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station Article No. 11, 182. This work was in part supported by a grant from the Indiana Corporation for Science and Technology.




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W.-J. Yang, P. J. Rich, J. D. Axtell, K. V. Wood, C. C. Bonham, G. Ejeta, M. V. Mickelbart, and D. Rhodes
Genotypic Variation for Glycinebetaine in Sorghum
Crop Sci., January 1, 2003; 43(1): 162 - 169.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1988 by the American Society of Plant Biologists