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1.
Publicly available genomic tools help researchers integrate information and make new discoveries. In this paper, we describe the development of immortal mapping populations of rapid cycling, self-compatible lines, molecular markers, and linkage maps for Brassica rapa and B. oleracea and make the data and germplasm available to the Brassica research community. The B. rapa population consists of 160 recombinant inbred (RI) lines derived from the cross of highly inbred lines of rapid cycling and yellow sarson B. rapa. The B. oleracea population consists of 155 double haploid (DH) lines derived from an F1 cross between two DH lines, rapid cycling and broccoli. A total of 120 RFLP probes, 146 SSR markers, and one phenotypic trait (flower color) were used to construct genetic linkage maps for both species. The B. rapa map consists of 224 molecular markers distributed along 10 linkage groups (A1–A10) with a total distance of 1125.3 cM and a marker density of 5.7 cM/marker. The B. oleracea genetic map consists of 279 molecular markers and one phenotypic marker distributed along nine linkage groups (C1–C9) with a total distance of 891.4 cM and a marker density of 3.2 cM/marker. A syntenic analysis with Arabidopsis thaliana identified collinear genomic blocks that are in agreement with previous studies, reinforcing the idea of conserved chromosomal regions across the Brassicaceae.  相似文献   

2.
We constructed a 1,257-marker, high-density genetic map of Brassica oleracea spanning 703 cM in nine linkage groups, designated LG1–LG9. It was developed in an F2 segregating population of 143 individuals obtained by crossing double haploid plants of broccoli “Early-Big” and cauliflower “An-Nan Early”. These markers are randomly distributed throughout the map, which includes a total of 1,062 genomic SRAP markers, 155 cDNA SRAP markers, 26 SSR markers, 3 broccoli BAC end sequences and 11 known Brassica genes: BoGSL-ALK, BoGSL-ELONG, BoGSL-PROa, BoGSL-PROb, BoCS-lyase, BoGS-OH, BoCYP79F1, BoS-GT (glucosinolate pathway), BoDM1 (resistance to downy mildew), BoCALa, BoAP1a (inflorescence architecture). BoDM1 and BoGSL-ELONG are linked on LG 2 at 0.8 cM, making it possible to use the glucosinolate gene as a marker for the disease resistance gene. By QTL analysis, we found three segments involved in curd formation in cauliflower. The map was aligned to the C genome linkage groups and chromosomes of B. oleracea and B. napus, and anchored to the physical map of A. thaliana. This map adds over 1,000 new markers to Brassica molecular tools. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

3.
Resistance to six known races of black rot in crucifers caused by Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Pammel) Dowson is absent or very rare in Brassica oleracea (C genome). However, race specific and broad-spectrum resistance (to type strains of all six races) does appear to occur frequently in other brassica genomes including B. rapa (A genome). Here, we report the genetics of broad spectrum resistance in the B. rapa Chinese cabbage accession B162, using QTL analysis of resistance to races 1 and 4 of the pathogen. A B. rapa linkage map comprising ten linkage groups (A01–A10) with a total map distance of 664 cM was produced, based on 223 AFLP bands and 23 microsatellites from a F2 population of 114 plants derived from a cross between the B. rapa susceptible inbred line R-o-18 and B162. Interaction phenotypes of 125 F2 plants were assessed using two criteria: the percentage of inoculation sites in which symptoms developed, and the severity of symptoms per plant. Resistance to both races was correlated and a cluster of highly significant QTL that explained 24–64% of the phenotypic variance was located on A06. Two additional QTLs for resistance to race 4 were found on A02 and A09. Markers closely linked to these QTL could assist in the transference of the resistance into different B. rapa cultivars or into B. oleracea.  相似文献   

4.
The FLC gene product is an inhibitor of flowering in Arabidopsis. FLC homologs in Brassica species are thought to control vernalization. We cloned four FLC homologs (BoFLCs) from Brassica oleracea. Three of these, BoFLC1, BoFLC3 and BoFLC5, have been previously characterized. The fourth novel sequence displayed 98% sequence homology to the previously identified gene BoFLC4, but also showed 91% homology to BrFLC2 from Brassica rapa. Phylogenetic analysis showed that this clone belongs to the FLC2 clade. Therefore, we designated this gene BoFLC2. Based on the segregation of RFLP, SRAP, CAPS, SSR and AFLP loci, a detailed linkage map of B. oleracea was constructed in the F2 progeny obtained from a cross of B. oleracea cv. Green Comet (broccoli; non-vernalization type) and B. oleracea cv. Reiho (cabbage; vernalization type), which covered 540 cM, 9 major linkage groups. Six quantitative trait loci (QTL) controlling flowering time were detected. BoFLC1, BoFLC3 and BoFLC5 were not linked to the QTLs controlling flowering time. However, the largest QTL effect was located in the region where BoFLC2 was mapped. Genotyping of F2 plants at the BoFLC2 locus showed that most of the early flowering plants were homozygotes of BoFLC-GC, whereas most of the late- and non-flowering plants were homozygotes of BoFLC-Rei. The BoFLC2 homologs present in plants of the non-vernalization type were non-functional, due to a frameshift in exon 4. Moreover, duplications and deletions of BoFLC2 were detected in broccoli and a rapid cycling line, respectively. These results suggest that BoFLC2 contributes to the control of flowering time in B. oleracea.  相似文献   

5.
In Brassica, the thioredoxinhproteins, THL1 and THL2, were previously found to be potential inhibitors of the S receptor kinase (SRK) in the Brassica self-incompatibilty response. To investigate the biological roles of THL1 and THL2 in pollen–pistil interactions, the stigma-specific SLR1 promoter was used to drive antisense THL1/2 expression in Brassica napus cv. Westar. This cultivar is normally compatible, but antisense suppression of THL1/2 led to a low level constitutive rejection of all Brassica napus pollen tested. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that the pollen rejection was a typical Brassica self-incompatibility rejection response with reduced pollen adhesion, germination and pollen tube growth. In addition, Westar was found to express the SLG15 and SRK15 proteins which may be the target of regulation by THL1 and THL2. Thus, these results indicate that the THL1 and THL2 are required for full pollen acceptance in B. napus cv. Westar.  相似文献   

6.
A dominant male sterility (DGMS) line 79-399-3, developed from a spontaneous mutation in Brassica oleracea var. capitata, has been widely used in production of hybrid cultivars in China. In this line, male sterility is controlled by a dominant gene Ms-cd1. In the present study, fine mapping of Ms-cd1 was conducted by screening a segregating population Ms79-07 with 2,028 individuals developed by four times backcrossing using a male sterile Brassica oleracea var. italica line harboring Ms-cd1 as donor and Brassica oleracea var. alboglabra as the recipient. Bulked segregation analysis (BSA) was performed for the BC4 population Ms79-07 using 26,417 SRAP primer SRAPs and 1,300 SSRs regarding of male sterility and fertility. A high-resolution map surrounding Ms-cd1 was constructed with 14 SRAPs and one SSR. The SSR marker 8C0909 was closely linked to the MS-cd1 gene with a distance of 2.06 cM. Fourteen SRAPs closely linked to the target gene were identified; the closest ones on each side were 0.18 cM and 2.16 cM from Ms-cd1. Three of these SRAPs were successfully converted to dominant SCAR markers with a distance to the Ms-cd1 gene of 0.18, 0.39 and 4.23 cM, respectively. BLAST analysis with these SCAR marker sequences identified a collinear genomic region about 600 kb in scaffold 000010 on chromosomeA10 in B. rapa and on chromosome 5 in A. thaliana. These results provide additional information for map-based cloning of the Ms-cd1 gene and will be helpful for marker-assisted selection (MAS).  相似文献   

7.
AvrLepR1 of the fungal pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans is the avirulence gene that corresponds to Brassica LepR1, a plant gene controlling dominant, race-specific resistance to this pathogen. An in vitro cross between the virulent L. maculans isolate, 87-41, and the avirulent isolate, 99-56, was performed in order to map the AvrLepR1 gene. The disease reactions of the 94 of the resulting F1 progenies were tested on the canola line ddm-12-6s-1, which carries LepR1. There were 44 avirulent progenies and 50 virulent progenies suggesting a 1:1 segregation ratio and that the avirulence of 99-56 on ddm-12-6s-1 is controlled by a single gene. Tetrad analysis also indicated a 1:1 segregation ratio. The AvrLepR1 gene was positioned on a genetic map of L. maculans relative to 259 sequence-related amplified polymorphism (SRAP) markers, two cloned avirulence genes (AvrLm1 and AvrLm4-7) and the mating type locus (MAT1). The genetic map consisted of 36 linkage groups, ranging in size from 13.1 to 163.7 cM, and spanned a total of 2,076.4 cM. The AvrLepR1 locus was mapped to linkage group 4, in the 13.1 cM interval flanked by the SRAP markers SBG49-110 and FT161-223. The AvrLm4-7 locus was also positioned on linkage group 4, close to but distinct from the AvrLepR1 locus, in the 5.4 cM interval flanked by FT161-223 and P1314-300. This work will make possible the further characterization and map-based cloning of AvrLepR1. A combination of genetic mapping and pathogenicity tests demonstrated that AvrLepR1 is different from each of the L. maculans avirulence genes that have been characterized previously.  相似文献   

8.
The nucleotide sequences of ten SP11 and nine SRK alleles in Raphanus sativus were determined, and deduced amino acid sequences were compared with those of Brassica SP11 and SRK. The amino acid sequence identity of class-I SP11s in R. sativus was about 30% on average, the highest being 52.2%, while that of the S domain of class-I SRK was 77.0% on average and ranged from 70.8% to 83.9%. These values were comparable to those of SP11 and SRK in Brassica oleracea and B. rapa. SP11 of R. sativus S-21 was found to be highly similar to SP11 of B. rapa S-9 (89.5% amino acid identity), and SRK of R. sativus S-21 was similar to SRK of B. rapa S-9 (91.0%). SP11 and SRK of R. sativus S-19 were also similar to SP11 and SRK of B. oleracea S-20, respectively. These similarities of both SP11 and SRK alleles between R. sativus and Brassica suggest that these S haplotype pairs originated from the same ancestral S haplotypes.  相似文献   

9.
The availability of whole genome shotgun sequences (WGSs) in Brassica oleracea provides an unprecedented opportunity for development of microsatellite or simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers for genome analysis and genetic improvement in Brassica species. In this study, a total of 56,465 non-redundant SSRs were identified from the WGSs in B. oleracea, with dinucleotide repeats being the most abundant, followed by tri-, tetra- and pentanucleotide repeats. From these, 1,398 new SSR markers (designated as BoGMS) with repeat length ≥25 bp were developed and used to survey polymorphisms with a panel of six rapeseed varieties, which is the largest number of SSR markers developed for the C genome in a single study. Of these SSR markers, 752 (69.5%) showed polymorphism among the six varieties. Of these, 266 markers that showed clear scorable polymorphisms between B. napus varieties No. 2127 and ZY821 were integrated into an existing B. napus genetic linkage map. These new markers are preferentially distributed on the linkage groups in the C genome, and significantly increased the number of SSR markers in the C genome. These SSR markers will be very useful for gene mapping and marker-assisted selection of important agronomic traits in Brassica species.  相似文献   

10.
Success of interspecific hybridization relies mostly on the adequate similarity between the implicated genomes to ensure synapsis, pairing and recombination between appropriate chromosomes during meiosis in allopolyploid species. Allotetraploid Brassica napus (AACC) is a model of natural hybridization between Brassica rapa (AA) and Brassica oleracea (CC), which are originally derived from a common ancestor, but genomic constitution of the same chromosomes probably varied among these species through time after establishment, giving rise to cytogenetic difference in the synthetic hybrids. Herein we investigated meiotic behaviors of A and C chromosomes of synthetic allotriploid Brassica hybrids (ACC) at molecular and cytological levels, which result from the interspecific cross between natural B. napus (AACC) and B.oleracea (CC), and the results showed that meiosis course was significantly aberrant in allotriploid Brassica hybrids, and chromosomes aligned chaotically at metaphase I, chromosome bridges and lags were frequently observed from later metaphase I to anaphase II during meiosis. Simultaneously, we also noticed that meiosis-related genes were abruptly down-regulated in allotriploid Brassica hybrids, which likely accounted for irregular scenario of meiosis observed in these synthetic hybrids. Therefore, these results indicated that inter-genomic exchanges of A and C chromosomes could occur frequently in synthetic Brassica hybrids, and provided an efficient approach for genetic changes of homeologous chromosomes during meiosis in polyploid B.napus breeding program.  相似文献   

11.
A set of 398 simple sequence repeat markers (SSRs) have been developed and characterised for use with genetic studies of Brassica species. Small-insert (250–900 bp) genomic libraries from Brassica rapa, B. nigra, B. oleracea and B. napus, highly enriched for dinucleotide and trinucleotide SSR motifs, were constructed. Screening the clones with a mixture of oligonucleotide repeat probes revealed positive hybridisation to between 75% and 90% of the clones. Of these, 1,230 were sequenced. Primer pairs were designed for 398 SSR clones, and of these, 270 (67.8%) amplified a PCR product of the expected size in their focal and/or closely related species. A further screen of 138 primers pairs that produced a PCR product in B. napus germplasm found that 86 (62.3%) revealed length polymorphisms within at least one line of a test array representing the four Brassica species. The results of this screen were used to identify 56 SSRs and were combined with 41 SSRs that had previously shown polymorphism between the parents of a B. napus mapping population. These 97 SSR markers were mapped relative to a framework of RFLP markers and detected 136 loci over all 19 linkage groups of the oilseed rape genome.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at Communicated by O. Savolainen  相似文献   

12.
Cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata L.) is one of the most popular cultivated vegetables worldwide. Cabbage has rich phenotypic diversity, including plant height, head shape, head color, leaf shape and leaf color. Leaf color plays an important role in cabbage growth and development. At present, there are few reports on fine mapping of leaf color mutants in B. oleracea. In this study, a naturally occurring yellow-green leaf cabbage mutant (YL-1), derived from the self-pollinated progenies of the hybrid ‘Hosom’, was used for inheritance analysis and gene mapping. Segregation populations including F2 and BC1 were generated from the cross of two inbred lines, YL-1 and 01–20. Genetic analysis with the F2 and BC1 populations demonstrated that the yellow-green leaf color was controlled by a single recessive nuclear gene, ygl-1. Insertion–deletion (InDel) markers, designed based on the parental re-sequencing data, were used for the preliminary mapping with BSA (bulked segregant analysis) method. A genetic map constructed with 15 InDels indicated that ygl-1 was located on chromosome C01. The ygl-1 gene is flanked by InDel markers ID2 and M8, with genetic distances of 0.4 cM and 0.35 cM, respectively. The interval distance between two markers is 167 kb. Thus, it enables us to locate the ygl-1 gene for the first time in B. oleracea. This study lays the foundation for candidate gene prediction and ygl-1gene cloning.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Orychophragmus violaceus, Brassica campestris cv. Chuanyou No.8, and Brassica juncea cv. Luzhousileng diurnal changes of net photosynthetic rate (P N) and activities of carbonic anhydrase (CA) of leaves were studied. One uni-modal curve occurred at the diurnal changes of P N in O. violaceus, but bimodal curves were found in B. campestris and B. juncea. Thus photosynthetic midday depression was not found in O. violaceus but in both Brassica species. Midday depression of P N in O. violaceus was not related to high temperature or low humidity at midday but to the activity of CA.  相似文献   

15.
The objective of this investigation was to tag a locus for white rust resistance in a Brassica rapa ssp. oleifera F2 population segregating for this trait, using bulked segregant analysis with random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers, linkage mapping and a candidate gene approach based on resistance gene analogs (RGAs). The resistance source was the Finnish line Bor4109. The reaction against white rust races 7a and 7v was scored in 20 seedlings from each self-pollinated F2 individual. The proportion of resistant plants among these F3 families varied from 0 to 67%. Bulked segregant analysis did not reveal any markers linked with resistance and, therefore, a linkage map with 81 markers was created. A locus that accounted for 18.4% of the variation in resistance to white rust was mapped to linkage group (LG) 2 near the RAPD marker Z19a. During the study, a bacterial resistance gene homologous to Arabidopsis RPS2 and six different RGAs were sequenced. RPS2 and five of the RGAs were mapped to linkage groups LG1, LG4 and LG9. Unfortunately, none of the RGAs could be shown to be associated with white rust resistance.Communicated by H.C. BeckerThe nucleotide sequence data reported has been deposited in the Genbank under the accession numbers AF315081–AF315087.  相似文献   

16.
The identification of the gene Pp523, conferring downy mildew resistance to adult plants of broccoli (Brassica oleracea convar. italica), led to the construction of a genetic map that included this resistance locus, 301 amplified fragment length polymorphisms, 55 random amplified polymorphic DNAs, 46 inter-simple sequence repeats, three simple sequence repeats, four other PCR markers and a flower colour locus, all gathered into nine major linkage groups. Nineteen additional molecular markers were clustered into one group of four markers, one group of three markers and six pairs of markers. The map spans over 731.9 cM, corresponding to 89.5% of the 818 cM estimated to be the total genome length. A significant number of the mapped markers, 19.3%, showed distorted segregation. The average distance between mapped adjacent markers is 1.64 cM, which places this map among the densest published to date for this species. Using bulked segregant analysis, we identified a group of molecular markers flanking and closely linked in coupling to the resistance gene and included these in the map. Two markers linked in coupling, OPK17_980 and AT.CTA_133/134, are located at 3.1 cM and 3.6 cM, respectively, at each side from the resistance gene. These markers can be used for marker-assisted selection in breeding programs aiming at the introgression of this gene in susceptible B. oleracea genotypes. The fine mapping of the genomic region surrounding the Pp523 resistance gene is currently being carried out, a basic condition for its isolation via positional cloning.  相似文献   

17.
Sequence related amplified polymorphism (SRAP) was used to construct an ultradense genetic recombination map for a doubled haploid (DH) population in B. napus. A total of 1,634 primer combinations including 12 fluorescently labeled primers and 442 unlabeled ones produced 13,551 mapped SRAP markers. All these SRAPs were assembled in 1,055 bins that were placed onto 19 linkage groups. Ten of the nineteen linkage groups were assigned to the A genome and the remaining nine to the C genome on the basis of the differential SRAP PCR amplification in two DH lines of B. rapa and B. oleracea. Furthermore, all 19 linkage groups were assigned to their corresponding N1–N19 groups of B. napus by comparison with 55 SSR markers used to construct previous maps in this species. In total, 1,663 crossovers were detected, resulting in a map length span of 1604.8 cM. The marker density is 8.45 SRAPs per cM, and there could be more than one marker in 100 kb physical distance. There are four linkage groups in the A genome with more than 800 SRAP markers each, and three linkage groups in the C genome with more 1,000 SRAP markers each. Our studies suggest that a single SRAP map might be applicable to the three Brassica species, B. napus, B. oleracea and B. rapa. The use of this ultra high-density genetic recombination map in marker development and map-based gene cloning is discussed. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

18.
Clubroot disease, caused by the obligate plant pathogen Plasmodiophora brassicae Wor., is one of the most economically important diseases affecting Brassica crops in the world. The genetic basis of clubroot resistance (CR) has been well studied in three economically important Brassica species: B. rapa, B. oleracea, and B. napus. In B. rapa, mainly in Chinese cabbage, one minor and seven major CR genes introduced from European fodder turnips have been identified. Mapping of these CR genes localized Crr1 on R8, Crr2 on R1, CRc on R2, and Crr4 on R6 linkage groups of Chinese cabbage. Genes Crr3, CRa, CRb, and CRk mapped to R3, but at two separate loci, CRa and CRb are independent of Crr3 and CRk, which are closely linked. Further analysis suggested that Crr1, Crr2, and CRb have similar origins in the ancestral genome as in chromosome 4 of Arabidopsis thaliana. Genetic analysis of clubroot resistance genes in B. oleracea suggests that they are quantitative traits. Twenty-two quantitative trait loci (QTLs) were mapped in different linkage groups of B. oleracea. In B. napus, genetic analysis of clubroot resistance was found to be governed by one or two dominant genes, whereas resistance conferred by two recessive genes is reported. The quantitative analysis approach, however, proved that they are polygenic. In total, at least 16 QTLs have been detected on eight chromosomes of B. napus, N02, N03, N08, N09, N13, N15, N16, and N19. The chromosomal location of the other six QTLs is not clear. Cloning of any of these QTLs or resistance loci was not, however, possible until recently. Progress in genomics, particularly the techniques of comparative mapping and genome sequencing, supplements cloning and allows improved characterization of CR genes. Further development of DNA markers linked to CR genes will in turn hasten the breeding of clubroot-resistant Brassica cultivars.  相似文献   

19.
Using a direct amplification of genomic DNA from two Brassica rapa forms, we obtained two homologs of the CONSTANS gene, which controls the photoperiodic induction of flowering in Arabidopsis plants. The cloned fragments of B. rapa genome were identified as members of the CONSTANS-LIKE1 class. By aligning the nucleotide sequences of the CONSTANS gene and its homologs, three classes, CONSTANS, CONSTANS-LIKE1, and CONSTANS-LIKE2, were distinctly discerned by their primary structure. The pattern of restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) of the CONSTANS homologs in B. carinata, B. juncea, B. napus, B. nigra, B. oleracea, and B. rapa were genome-specific; in addition, the CONSTANS homologs were classified by plant geographic origin, and we assume that such classification is related to plant photoperiodic response.Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 2, 2005, pp. 274–281.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Martynov, Khavkin.This revised version was published online in April 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

20.
Considerable genotypic variation exists in the response of different cultivars of rapeseed (Brassica napus) to B deficiency. This raises the possibility of genetic improvement of a B nutrition trait that will make the plant more tolerant to low B stress. The results of our study showed that B-efficient backcross plants had lower B concentration and more dry matter when grown at low levels of B when compared with the recurrent parent. Accordingly, we proposed that the improved B efficiency was attributed to either a high B utilization efficiency or less demand for B. The results of the genetic analysis showed that B efficiency is a dominant trait that is controlled by a single locus, namely BnBE2. By using bulked segregant analysis (BSA) in combination with amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and sequence related amplified polymorphism (SRAP) techniques, five SRAP markers and one converted single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) marker were identified to be linked to BnBE2 after screening 1,800 primer combinations. The six markers together with BnBE2 were mapped in a region that covered a genetic distance of 6.9 cM on a linkage group using a BC6 population. This region was located on linkage group N14 after mapping these markers in two doubled haploid (DH) populations (TNDH and BQDH). The SRAP and AFLP markers were sequenced and found to be homologous to a BAC sequence from Brassica oleracea (CC). This finding suggested that the segment containing BnBE2 locus originated from the C genome of Brassica oleracea. Three SSR markers were identified to be linked to BnBE2 through comparative mapping. All these markers might have potential value for facilitating the pyramiding of the BnBE2 gene with other B efficient genes in order to improve the B efficiency trait and for further fine mapping of the BnBE2 gene in Brassica napus.  相似文献   

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