Construction of a Female Sterility Maintaining System Based on a Novel Mutation of the MEL2 Gene
Background Hybrid rice has significant yield advantage and stress tolerance compared with inbred rice. However, production of hybrid rice seeds requires extensive manual labors. Currently, hybrid rice seeds are produced by crosspollination of male sterile lines by fertile paternal lines. Because see...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Rice 2024-02, Vol.17 (1), p.12-12, Article 12 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Hybrid rice has significant yield advantage and stress tolerance compared with inbred rice. However, production of hybrid rice seeds requires extensive manual labors. Currently, hybrid rice seeds are produced by crosspollination of male sterile lines by fertile paternal lines. Because seeds from paternal lines can contaminate the hybrid seeds, mechanized production by mixed-seeding and mixed-harvesting is difficult. This problem can be solved if the paternal line is female sterile.
Results
Here we identified a female infertile mutant named
h569
carrying a novel mutation (A
1106
G) in the
MEL2
gene that was previously reported to regulate meiosis entry both in male and female organs.
h569
mutant is female infertile but male normal, suggesting that MEL2 regulates meiosis entry in male and female organs through distinct pathways. The
MEL2
gene and
h569
mutant gave us tools to construct female sterility maintaining systems that can be used for propagation of female sterile lines. We connected the wild-type
MEL2
gene with pollen-killer gene
ZmAA1
and seed-marker gene
DsRed2
in one T-DNA cassette and transformed it into ZZH1607, a widely used restorer line. Transgenic line carrying a single transgene inserted in an intergenic region was selected to cross with
h569
mutant. F
2
progeny carrying homozygous A
1106
G mutation and hemizygous transgene displayed 1:1 segregation of fertile and infertile pollen grains and 1:1 segregation of fluorescent and non-fluorescent seeds upon self-fertilization. All of the non-fluorescent seeds generated female infertile plants, while the fluorescent seeds generated fertile plants that reproduced in the way as their previous generation.
Conclusions
These results indicated that the female sterility maintaining system constructed in the study can be used to breed and propagate paternal lines that are female infertile. The application of this system will enable mechanized production of hybrid rice seed by using the mixed-seeding and mixed harvesting approach, which will significantly reduce the cost in hybrid rice seed production. |
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ISSN: | 1939-8425 1939-8433 1934-8037 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s12284-024-00688-x |