| Literature DB >> 32955759 |
Vanesa Calvo-Baltanás1, Cris L Wijnen1, Chao Yang1,2, Nina Lukhovitskaya1,3, C Bastiaan de Snoo1,4, Linus Hohenwarter1,2, Joost J B Keurentjes1, Hans de Jong1, Arp Schnittger1,2, Erik Wijnker1.
Abstract
Plant breeding applications exploiting meiotic mutant phenotypes (like the increase or decrease of crossover (CO) recombination) have been proposed over the last years. As recessive meiotic mutations in breeding lines may affect fertility or have other pleiotropic effects, transient silencing techniques may be preferred. Reverse breeding is a breeding technique that would benefit from the transient downregulation of CO formation. The technique is essentially the opposite of plant hybridization: a method to extract parental lines from a hybrid. The method can also be used to efficiently generate chromosome substitution lines (CSLs). For successful reverse breeding, the two homologous chromosome sets of a heterozygous plant must be divided over two haploid complements, which can be achieved by the suppression of meiotic CO recombination and the subsequent production of doubled haploid plants. Here we show the feasibility of transiently reducing CO formation using virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) by targeting the meiotic gene MSH5 in a wild-type heterozygote of Arabidopsis thaliana. The application of VIGS (rather than using lengthy stable transformation) generates transgene-free offspring with the desired genetic composition: we obtained parental lines from a wild-type heterozygous F1 in two generations. In addition, we obtained 20 (of the 32 possible) CSLs in one experiment. Our results demonstrate that meiosis can be modulated at will in A. thaliana to generate CSLs and parental lines rapidly for hybrid breeding. Furthermore, we illustrate how the modification of meiosis using VIGS can open routes to develop efficient plant breeding strategies.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Arabidopsis thalianazzm321990; MSH5; chromosome substitution lines; meiosis; reverse breeding; technical advance; virus-induced gene silencing
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32955759 PMCID: PMC7756339 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417