dc.description.abstract |
Hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) being the second most important crop of
the world and the single largest traded crop with a global annual production exceeding 650
million tons from an area of 215.26 million hectare. A total of 78.57 million tons of wheat
was produced in India in 2009 from an area of 27.6 million hectare. The diploid wheat
Triticum monococcum L. (einkorn), one of the first crop domesticated by humans in the
Fertile Crescent 10,000 - 12,000 years ago which is being still cultivated for its edible seeds
in the mountainous area of Germany, Switzerland and Italy, is an ideal material for induced
variability which could be characterized and transferred to cultivated wheat. The diploid
nature of T. monococcum with smaller genome size of 5,700 Mb compared to 17,300 Mb of
bread wheat, the existence of a very high level of polymorphism for DNA based markers,
conservation of colinearity and synteny with other cereal crops, availability of a large BAC
library and resistance against various wheat disease makes this species an attractive diploid
model for gene discovery in wheat. The EMS induced dwarf (Rht22), soft glume (sog3) and
brittle (brcl, brc2 and brc3) mutants used in the present study were isolated from diploid
wheat line T. monococcum ace. pau14087. Rht22 was found to be insensitive to exogenous
gibberellic acid (GA3) application. In histological studies, the cell size of the Rht22 was
found to be reduced due to loss-of-function of the gene in the mutant. The spike of soft
glume (sog3) mutant was more compact with lax glumes. The seeds in the mature spike
could be easily threshed manually. On removal of individual spikelets from the spike, the
rachis remained intact whereas in T. monococcum the spikelets separate with a wedge of
rachis fragments without leaving any intact rachis. Out of three brittle mutants studied
morphologically one (brcl) had early flowering and early brittleness (at 40-45 days seedling
stage) while the other two (brc2 and brc3) had late flowering and late brittleness (at 65-70
days seedling stage), indicating that brittleness was development stage specific. All the
brittle mutants were sensitive to lodging and had brittleness in all parts of plants including
leaves, leaf sheaths, spikes, culms and roots. Biochemical studies of brittle culm mutants
indicated that all the brittle mutants had less a-cellulose on secondary cell wall than T.
monococcum indicating that all of them did not have proper deposition of cellulose
microfibrils. Staining by Phloroglucinol-HCL, a lignin specific stain indicated that all the
brittle mutants had slight increase in lignin content than the wild type and had very little
cellulose deposition on secondary cell wall of sclerenchymatous cells. After treatment with
sodium chlorite which removes all hemicellulose and lignin it was found that in brittle
mutants all cells became deformed due to their less cellulose in cell wall whereas in wild
type cell shape remained intact. Atomic Force Microscopy studies of surface of brittle and
wild type indicated that the surfaces of all brittle mutants were more rough than the wild
type In order to map the dwarfing, soft glume and brittle culm mutants, mapping
populations were developed by crossing the dwarf (Rht22), soft glume (sog3) and brittle
(brcl, brc2 and brc3) mutants with Triticum boeoticum acc.pau 5088, a non-brittle, tall and
hard threshing wild diploid progenitor of T. monococcum. T. boeoticum ace. 5088 was
chosen as a parent for development of mapping populations on the basis of its high level of
polymorphism with T. monococcum. Based on the data on recombination frequency, the
flanking markers xbarc37 and xbarcll3 mapped at distance of 1.9 cM and 10.3 cM,
respectively from the brcl on chromosome 6AS, flanking markers xcfd62 and xcfd2170
were mapped at distance of 0.8 cM and 2.9 cM, respectively from the brc-2 on chromosome
3AL, whereas flanking markers xgwml35 and xwmc470 mapped at distance of 2.1cM and
3.9 cM, respectively from the brc3 on chromosome 1AL. Similarly flanking markers
xwmc89 and xbarcl07 mapped at distance of 0.9 cM and 0.6 cM, respectively from the
Rht22 on chromosome 4AL and markers xgwm473 and xbarc69 maped at the distance of
1.8 cM and 28.3 cM, respectively from sog3 on chromosome 7AL. For cloning candidate
gene of Rht22, gene specific primers were synthesized covering the DELLA domain of
gibberellic acid insensitive dwarf mutant gene Rht-Dl of hexaploid wheat. Amplification
was observed in all the dwarf mutants along with T moncoccum and T boeoticum. After
sequencing Rht22 amplicon two bp deletion was found in DELLA domain. PCR primers
based on deletion in DELLA motif amplified Rht22 only which confirmed the two bp
deletion in DELLA motif which was also confirmed by DOT MATRIX view. Sequence
alignment of Rht22 shows high similarity with other DELLA domain defected dwarfing
gene of hexaploid wheat, barley, mays and rice. Translated protein of Rht22 shows frame
shift in amino acids. 3D of Rht22 shows high similarity with 3D of Rht-Dl. Soft glume
(sog3) mutant mapped on chromosome 7A which is syntenic to 7H chromosome of barley
where a naked seed mutant nud has been mapped suggesting that sog3 may be orthologous
to nud of barley which shows one major ortholog on rice chromosome 6 and one minor
ortholog on rice 2 chromosome. Three rice chromosomes, 2, 1 and 5 syntenic to
T. monococcum 6,3 and 1 respectively with brittle mutants brcl, brc2 and brc3 Ifech had
two CesA and CSL orthologs. BLASTN analysis of the six rice CesA and CSL genes
identified about five EST contigs with high similarity (bit score >200) but none of them was
bin mapped. |
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