Publication | Open Access
A segmental duplication encompassing S-haplotype triggers pollen-part self-compatibility in Japanese pear (Pyrus pyrifolia)
23
Citations
53
References
2013
Year
Self-compatible mutants of self-incompatible crops have been extensively studied for research and agricultural purposes. Until now, the only known pollen-part self-compatible mutants in Rosaceae subtribe Pyrinae, which contains many important fruit trees, were polyploid. This study revealed that the pollen-part self-compatibility of breeding selection 415-1, a recently discovered mutant of Japanese pear (<i>Pyrus pyrifolia</i>) derived from γ-irradiated pollen, is caused by a duplication of an <i>S</i>-haplotype. In the progeny of 415-1, some plants had three <i>S</i>-haplotypes, two of which were from the pollen parent. Thus, 415-1 was able to produce pollen with two <i>S</i>-haplotypes, even though it was found to be diploid: the relative nuclear DNA content measured by flow cytometry showed no significant difference from that of a diploid cultivar. Inheritance patterns of simple sequence repeat (SSR) alleles in the same linkage group as the <i>S</i>-locus (LG 17) showed that some SSRs closely linked to <i>S</i>-haplotypes were duplicated in progeny containing the duplicated <i>S</i>-haplotype. These results indicate that the pollen-part self-compatibility of 415-1 is not caused by a mutation of pollen <i>S</i> factors in either one of the <i>S</i>-haplotypes, but by a segmental duplication encompassing the <i>S</i>-haplotype. Consequently, 415-1 can produce <i>S</i>-heteroallelic pollen grains that are capable of breaking down self-incompatibility (SI) by competitive interaction between the two different <i>S</i> factors in the pollen grain. 415-1 is the first diploid pollen-part self-compatible mutant with a duplicated <i>S</i>-haplotype to be discovered in the Pyrinae. The fact that 415-1 is not polyploid makes it particularly valuable for further studies of SI mechanisms.
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