| Literature DB >> 23007688 |
Małgorzata Targońska1, Aneta Hromada-Judycka, Hanna Bolibok-Brągoszewska, Monika Rakoczy-Trojanowska.
Abstract
Rye is one of the most important crops in Eastern and Northern Europe. Despite the numerous beneficial features of rye, its annual production decreases successively which correlates with the lack of progress in its breeding compared with other cereals. Biotechnological methods could effectively improve the breeding of rye. However, their application is highly limited by the absence of an efficient procedure for plant regeneration in vitro, since rye is one of the most recalcitrant cereals with regard to the tissue culture response (TCR), and successful regeneration is highly dependent on genotype. Efforts to understand the genetic mechanisms controlling TCR of rye have elucidated some basic aspects, and several genes and genome regions controlling this trait have been identified. The aim of this review is to summarize the limited current knowledge of this topic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23007688 PMCID: PMC3535354 DOI: 10.1007/s00299-012-1342-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Rep ISSN: 0721-7714 Impact factor: 4.570
Fig. 1TCR of selected rye inbred lines producing embryogenic callus from different explants. Based on Rakoczy-Trojanowska and Malepszy (1993, 1995), Rakoczy-Trojanowska et al. (1997) (MRT) and Popelka and Altpeter (2001) (PA)
Chromosomal location and effects of factors influencing TCR of immature embryos and anthers
| Explant type | Rye chromosomes encoding factors affecting TCR | Type of material used for analyses | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positively/trait | Negatively/trait | |||
| Immature embryos | 6R, 7R/ECF | − | Wheat-rye addition lines | Lazar et al. ( |
| 1R/EC, PR | − | Recombinant wheat-rye lines (1RS/1BL) | Langridge et al. ( | |
| 2R, 3R/ECF | 2R/R 6R, 1R/PR | Wheat-rye substitution lines | Pershina et al. ( | |
| Anthers | 3R, 4R | 5R, 1R, 3R | Wheat-rye addition lines | Martinez et al. ( |
| 4R/ECF, PR | − | Wheat-rye addition lines | Lazar et al. ( | |
| 1R | 5R | Wheat-rye substitution lines | Dobrovolskaya et al. ( | |
ECF embryogenic callus formation, RR root regeneration, PR plant regeneration
Characteristics of QTLs controlling rye TCR (based on Bolibok et al. 2007)
| Chromosome | Trait | QTL | LOD score | Weight | Variance explained (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1R | ESE |
| 3.78 | 16.929 | 28.4 |
| 4R | ESE |
| 6.0 | 2.33 | 18.2 |
| ICI |
| 2.32 | 8.029 | 11.4 | |
| 5R | ECI |
| 3.59 | −31.309 | 20.8 |
| ESE |
| 2.55 | 17.453 | 24.2 | |
| 6R | ECI |
| 3.23 | −31.223 | 22.1 |
| ESE |
| 3.64 | 10.581 | 41.6 | |
| 7R | ICI |
| 3.67 | 11.008 | 20.6 |
| ISE |
| 2.40 | −9.203 | 10.8 |
ECI % of immature embryos producing callus, ICI % of immature inflorescences producing callus, ISE % of immature inflorescences forming embryogenic callus, ESE % of immature embryos forming embryogenic callus
Fig. 2Logarithmic plot of the relative transcription level quotients of selected GDDSC products and Sc genes between the L318 and L9 rye lines. Values: >0—expression level higher in line L318; <0—expression level higher in line L9. T0—immature embryos, T4—tissue collected after 4 weeks on induction medium, 2DR—tissue collected after 2 days on regeneration medium (base on data from Hromada-Judycka et al. 2010; Gruszczyńska and Rakoczy-Trojanowska 2011)
Fig. 3Gene orthologs and GDDSC products that positively or negatively affect the subsequent steps of rye TCR