Literature DB >> 11218080

Erwin Baur or Carl Correns: who really created the theory of plastid inheritance?

R Hagemann1.   

Abstract

Historical reviews of the field of non-Mendelian genetics and many other publications credit Erwin Baur and Carl Correns equally for the development of the theory of plastid inheritance. However, a study of the original literature indicates that this conclusion is not correct. Analysis of the relevant articles leads to the conclusion that Baur alone deserves credit for the theory of plastid inheritance. In his classic article on the inheritance properties of white-margined Pelargonium plants, Baur (1909) stated: (1) The plastids are carriers of hereditary factors which are able to mutate. (2) In variegated plants, random sorting-out of plastids is taking place. (3) The genetic results indicate a biparental inheritance of plastids by egg cells and sperm cells in Pelargonium. By contrast, Correns held the view that in variegated plants there is a maternally transmitted labile state of the cytoplasm which switches either to a permanently "healthy" state (allowing the "indifferent" plastids to become green chloroplasts) or to a permanently "diseased, ill" cytoplasmic state (causing white plastids and cells). Otto Renner supported Baur's theory and worked out important characteristics of plastid inheritance in the genus Oenothera. In the 1930s Renner reported many more observations, which established plastid inheritance as a widely accepted genetic theory.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11218080     DOI: 10.1093/jhered/91.6.435

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hered        ISSN: 0022-1503            Impact factor:   2.645


  7 in total

1.  High-frequency gene transfer from the chloroplast genome to the nucleus.

Authors:  Sandra Stegemann; Stefanie Hartmann; Stephanie Ruf; Ralph Bock
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-06-19       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Chloroplast biogenesis: control of plastid development, protein import, division and inheritance.

Authors:  Wataru Sakamoto; Shin-Ya Miyagishima; Paul Jarvis
Journal:  Arabidopsis Book       Date:  2008-07-22

3.  Practice and politics in Japanese science: Hitoshi Kihara and the formation of a genetics discipline.

Authors:  Kaori Iida
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.326

4.  History of chloroplast genomics.

Authors:  Masahiro Sugiura
Journal:  Photosynth Res       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 3.573

Review 5.  The foundation of extranuclear inheritance: plastid and mitochondrial genetics.

Authors:  Rudolf Hagemann
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomics       Date:  2010-02-06       Impact factor: 3.291

6.  The levels of male gametic mitochondrial DNA are highly regulated in angiosperms with regard to mitochondrial inheritance.

Authors:  Dan-Yang Wang; Quan Zhang; Yang Liu; Zhi-Fu Lin; Shao-Xiang Zhang; Meng-Xiang Sun
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2010-07-06       Impact factor: 11.277

Review 7.  Plastid genomics in horticultural species: importance and applications for plant population genetics, evolution, and biotechnology.

Authors:  Marcelo Rogalski; Leila do Nascimento Vieira; Hugo P Fraga; Miguel P Guerra
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2015-07-30       Impact factor: 5.753

  7 in total

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