Male sterility and somatic hybridization in plant breeding

REVISTA DE LA FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS AGRARIAS(2019)

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摘要
Plant male sterility refers to the failure in the production of fertile pollen. It occurs spontaneously in natural populations and may be caused by genes encoded in the nuclear (genic male sterility; GMS) or mitochondria! (cytoplasmic male sterility; CMS) genomes. This feature has great agronomic value for the production of hybrid seeds, since it prevents self pollination without the need of emasculation which is time-consuming and cost-intensive. CMS has been widely used in crops, such as corn, rice, wheat, citrus, and several species of the family Solanaceae. Mitochondrial genes determining CMS have been uncovered in a wide range of plant species. The modes of action of CMS have been classified in terms of the effect they produce in the cell, which ultimately leads to a failure in the production of fertile pollen. Male fertility can be restored by nuclear-encoded genes, termed restorer-offertility (Rf) factors. CMS from wild plants has been transferred to species of agronomic interest through somatic hybridization. Somatic hybrids have also been produced to generate CMS de novo upon recombination of the mitochondrial genomes of two parental plants or by separating the CMS cytoplasm from the nuclear Rf alleles. As a result, somatic hybridization can he used as a highly efficient and useful strategy to incorporate CMS in breeding programs.
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关键词
incompatibility,plant mitochondria,somatic hybrid,genetic recombination
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