Morphology and ultrastructure of 11 barley shrunken endosperm mutants
- 1 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Theoretical and Applied Genetics
- Vol. 74 (2), 177-187
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00289966
Abstract
Eleven Na-azide induced barley shrunken endosperm mutants expressing xenia (sex) were characterized genetically and histologically. All mutants have reduced kernel size with kernel weights ranging from 11 to 57% of the wild type. With one exception, the mutant phenotypes are ascribable to single recessive mutant alleles, giving rise to a ratio of 3∶1 of normal and shrunken kernels on heterozygous plants. One mutant (B10), also monofactorially inherited, shows a gene dosage dependent pattern of expression in the endosperm. Among the 8 mutants tested for allelism, no allelic mutant genes were discovered. By means of translocation mapping, the mutant gene of B10 was localized to the short arm of chromosome 7, and that of B9 to the short arm of chromosome 1. Based on microscopy studies, the mutant kernel phenotypes fall into three classes, viz. mutants with both endosperm and embryo affected and with a non-viable embryo, mutants with both endosperm and embryo affected and with a viable embryo giving rise to plants with a clearly mutant phenotype, and finally mutants with only the endosperm affected and with a normal embryo giving rise to plants with normal phenotype. The mutant collection covers mutations in genes participating in all of the developmental phases of the endosperm, i.e. the passage from syncytial to the cellular endosperm, total lack of aleurone cell formation and disturbance in the pattern of aleurone cell formation. In the starchy endosperm, varying degrees of cell differentiation occur, ranging from slight deviations from wild type to complete loss of starchy endosperm traits. In the embryo, blocks in the major developmental phases are represented in the mutant collection, including arrest at the proembryo stage, continued cell divisions but no differentiation, and embryos deviating only slightly from the wild type.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Grain development in normal and high lysine barleyHereditas, 2009
- Free and bound indole-acetic acid is low in the endosperm of the maize mutantdefective endosperm-B18Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 1986
- Effects of the barley mutants Risø 1508 and 527 high lysine genes on the cellular development of the endospermPhysiologia Plantarum, 1986
- Cloning of the bronze locus in maize by a simple and generalizable procedure using the transposable controlling element Activator ( Ac )Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984
- Embryo-lethal mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana: Evidence for gametophytic expression of the mutant genesTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1982
- DEFECTIVE KERNEL MUTANTS OF MAIZE. I. GENETIC AND LETHALITY STUDIESGenetics, 1980
- Isolation and characterization of six embryo-lethal mutants of Arabidopsis thalianaDevelopmental Biology, 1979
- Embryo-lethal mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana: A model system for genetic analysis of plant embryo developmentDevelopmental Biology, 1979
- Shrunken Endosperm Mutants in Barley1Crop Science, 1975
- Studies on the Embryo of Hordeum sativum-I. The Development of the EmbryoBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1941