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Genetic control of irregular striping, a new phenotype in Cucurbita pepo
Year:
2003
Source of publication :
Euphytica
Authors :
Paris, Harry
;
.
Volume :
129
Co-Authors:
Paris, H.S., Department of Vegetable Crops, Agricultural Research Organization, Newe Ya'ar Research Center, P. O. Box 1021, Ramat Yishay 30-095, Israel
Facilitators :
From page:
119
To page:
126
(
Total pages:
8
)
Abstract:
Longitudinal striping of the fruit exterior is a common trait in Cucurbita pepo (pumpkin, squash, gourd). Striping occurs as ten pairs of alternating dark and light stripes that are regularly situated in accordance with the ten sub-epidermal carpellary vein tracts. Usually, the dark stripes occur in the central areas between the vein tracts, with the light stripes occupying the remainder of the fruit surface. A new phenotype is described in which dark spots or streaks occur in the central areas between the vein tracts; these are usually accompanied by dark streaks or stripes that occur adjacent to and over part or all of the length of some or all of the ten carpellary vein tracts. The inheritance of this irregular striping pattern was studied by crossing an accession that bred true for this phenotype with a near-isogenic line having light-colored fruits. The results indicated that irregular striping is dominant to light coloration and is conferred by a single gene. Testcrosses for allelism with regular striping were prepared by crossing the irregularly striped accession with near-isogenic lines having broad stripes, l-1BSt/l-1BSt, and narrow stripes, l-1St/l-1St. The testcross results revealed that irregular striping is conferred by an allele at the l-1 locus, designated l-1iSt. The l-1iSt allele is dominant to light-colored (l-1), recessive to dark-colored (L-1), and can be co-dominant or recessive to broad-striped (l-1BSt) and narrow-striped (l-1St), depending on whether or not it is fully expressed. Dominance relationships at the l-1 locus can, therefore, be represented as L-1 > (l-1Bst > l-1St) ≥ l-1iSt > l-1.
Note:
Related Files :
Citrullus colocynthis
Cucurbita
Cucurbita pepo
Fruit color
Genetics
gourd
Multiple allelism
Pepo
Pumpkin
squash
Show More
Related Content
More details
DOI :
10.1023/A:1021564610029
Article number:
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
32186
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
17/04/2018 01:08
Scientific Publication
Genetic control of irregular striping, a new phenotype in Cucurbita pepo
129
Paris, H.S., Department of Vegetable Crops, Agricultural Research Organization, Newe Ya'ar Research Center, P. O. Box 1021, Ramat Yishay 30-095, Israel
Genetic control of irregular striping, a new phenotype in Cucurbita pepo
Longitudinal striping of the fruit exterior is a common trait in Cucurbita pepo (pumpkin, squash, gourd). Striping occurs as ten pairs of alternating dark and light stripes that are regularly situated in accordance with the ten sub-epidermal carpellary vein tracts. Usually, the dark stripes occur in the central areas between the vein tracts, with the light stripes occupying the remainder of the fruit surface. A new phenotype is described in which dark spots or streaks occur in the central areas between the vein tracts; these are usually accompanied by dark streaks or stripes that occur adjacent to and over part or all of the length of some or all of the ten carpellary vein tracts. The inheritance of this irregular striping pattern was studied by crossing an accession that bred true for this phenotype with a near-isogenic line having light-colored fruits. The results indicated that irregular striping is dominant to light coloration and is conferred by a single gene. Testcrosses for allelism with regular striping were prepared by crossing the irregularly striped accession with near-isogenic lines having broad stripes, l-1BSt/l-1BSt, and narrow stripes, l-1St/l-1St. The testcross results revealed that irregular striping is conferred by an allele at the l-1 locus, designated l-1iSt. The l-1iSt allele is dominant to light-colored (l-1), recessive to dark-colored (L-1), and can be co-dominant or recessive to broad-striped (l-1BSt) and narrow-striped (l-1St), depending on whether or not it is fully expressed. Dominance relationships at the l-1 locus can, therefore, be represented as L-1 > (l-1Bst > l-1St) ≥ l-1iSt > l-1.
Scientific Publication
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