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Springer, Journal of Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology, 1(12), p. 37-42, 2003

DOI: 10.1007/bf03263157

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Molecular Mapping of a Gene for Fertility Restoration of Wild Abortive (WA) Cytoplasmic Male Sterility using a Basmati Rice Restorer Line

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The inheritance and molecular mapping of a fertility restorer gene in basmati quality restorer line PRR-78 was carried out using an F2 mapping population from the cross IR58025A X PRR-78 employing microsatellite markers. Dominant monogenic control of fertility restoration was observed in the F2, and further confirmed by test cross data. Out of 44 sequence tagged microsatellite (STMS) markers used in the bulked segregant analysis (BSA), four differentiated the fertile bulk from the sterile bulk as well as the two parental lines from each other. One of these markers, RM258 located on chromosome 10, was found linked to the restorer gene at a distance of 9.5 cM. Considering the RM258 location, additional STMS (RM171 and RM294A) and sequence tagged site (STS) primers derived from restriction fragment length polymorphic (RFLP) clones (G2155 and C1361) linked to fertility restorer gene(s) in other populations, were also used to find out a marker more tightly linked to the restorer gene. However, of these, RM171, RM294A and G2155 based primers amplified monomorphic fragments between parental lines and no amplification was observed with C1361. Cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence (CAPS) analysis of non-polymorphic STMS and STS markers and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis using five random primers reportedly linked to restorer gene in other populations, also failed to differentiate the two parents. While, the marker RM258 is being used in the restorer breeding to identify putative restorer lines, search for additional tightly linked markers is underway.