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Biochemical genetics of further chlorate resistant, molybdenum cofactor defective, conditional-lethal mutants of barley
Authors:Barbara J Steven  Dennis W Kirk  Simon WJ Bright and John L Wray
Institution:(1) Plant Molecular Genetics Unit, University of St. Andrews, Sir Harold Mitchell Building, KY16 9TH St. Andrews, Fife, UK;(2) Department of Biochemistry, AFRC Institute of Arable Crops Research, Rothamsted Experimental Station, AL5 2JQ Harpenden, Herts, UK;(3) Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Endinburgh Medical School, Hugh Robson Building, EH8 9XD George Square, Edingburgh, UK;(4) Present address: ICI Seeds, Jealott's Hill Research Station, RE12 6EY Bracknell, Berks, UK
Abstract:Summary Three plants, R9201 and R11301 (from cv. Maris Mink) and R12202 (from cv. Golden Promise), were selected by screening M2 populations of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings (mutagenised with azide in the M1) for resistance to 10 mM potassium chlorate. Selections R9201 and R11301 were crossed with the wild-type cv. Maris Mink and analysis of the F2 progeny showed that one quarter lacked shoot nitrate reductase activity. These F2 plants also withered and died in the continuous presence of nitrate as sole nitrogen source. Loss of nitrate reductase activity and withering and death were due in each case to a recessive mutation in a single nuclear gene. All F1 progeny derived from selfing selection R12202 lacked shoot nitrate reductase activity and also withered and subsequently died when maintained in the continuous presence of nitrate as sole nitrogen source. All homozygous mutant plants lacked not only shoot nitrate reductase activity but also shoot xanthine dehydrogenase activity. The plants took up nitrate, and possessed wild-type or higher levels of shoot nitrite reductase activity and NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity when treated with nitrate for 18 h. We conclude that loss of shoot nitrate reductase activity, xanthine dehydrogenase activity and withering and death, in the three mutants R9201, R11301 and R12202 is due to a mutation affecting the formation of a functional molybdenum cofactor. The mutants possessed wild-type levels of molybdenum and growth in the presence of unphysiologically high levels of molybdate did not restore shoot nitrate reductase or xanthine dehydrogenase activity. The shoot molybdenum cofactor of R9201 and of R12202 is unable to reconstitute NADPH nitrate reductase activity from extracts of the Neurospora crassa nit-1 mutant and dimerise the nitrate reductase subunits present in the respective barley mutant. The shoot molybdenum cofactor of R11301 is able to effect dimerisation of the R11301 nitrate reductase subunits and can reconstitute NADPH-nitrate reductase activity up to 40% of the wild-type molybdenum cofactor levels. The molybdenum cofactor of the roots of R9201 and R11301 is also defective. Genetic analysis demonstrated that R9201, but not R11301, is allelic to R9401 and Az34 (nar-2a), two mutants previously shown to be defective in synthesis of molybdenum cofactor. The mutations in R9401 and R9201 gave partial complementation of the nar-2a gene such that heterozygotes had higher levels of extractable nitrate reductase activity than the homozygous mutants.We conclude that: (a) the nar-2 gene locus encodes a step in molybdopterin biosynthesis; (b) the mutant R11301 represents a further locus involved in the synthesis of a functional molybdenum cofactor; (c) mutant Rl2202 is also defective in molybdopterin biosynthesis; and (d) the nar-2 gene locus and the gene locus defined by R11301 govern molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis in both shoot and root.
Keywords:Nitrate reductase  Chlorate resistance  Molybdenum cofactor mutants  Barley  Biochemical genetics
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