Publication | Open Access
Complementary Genes That Cause Black Ripening Hulls in F<sub>1</sub>Plants of Crosses between<i>Indica</i>and<i>Japonica</i>Rice Cultivars
13
Citations
9
References
2012
Year
BiologyPlant GeneticsBotanyF1 PlantsNatural SciencesGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyGenetic EngineeringJaponica Rice CultivarsGenetic VariationComplementary GenesGenomicsMedicinePlant GenomicsJaponica CultivarPlant BreedingPlant Physiology
The F1 plants of crosses between indica and japonica rice cultivars often have black hulls during ripening, even though both of the parental cultivars have yellow hulls. Complementary genes are suggested to be necessary for the black hull phenotype, and one of them is predicted to be Phr1, which encodes polyphenol oxidase. On the other hand, Bh4, which encodes a tyrosine transporter, is known to cause the black hull phenotype in wild rice species, Oryza rufipogon. However, the relationship between Bh4 and Phr1 in the black hull phenotype has not been elucidated. In this study, a genotype analysis of the segregating populations from the cross between an indica cultivar, Habataki, and a japonica cultivar, Arroz da Terra, indicated that only those plants that had both functional genes, Bh4 and Phr1, showed the black hull phenotype, suggesting that a complementarity of Bh4 and Phr1 was necessary for the black hull phenotype.
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