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1.
Derivatives of a cross between diploid Zea mays L. and Tripsacum dactyloides (L.) L. (2n = 72) were compared cytologically and morphologically. The objective of this study was to detect introgression from Tripsacum to maize that might have occurred during seven backcross generations with maize. Thirty-three morphological characters were used to analyze variation among aneuploid (20Zm + 2Td), 20-chromosome recovered maize, and the recurrent maize parent plants. Aneuploid and maize checks were extreme types, with 20-chromosome hybrid derivatives being morphologically intermediate. Several recovered maizes clustered with aneuploid plants and these hybrid derivatives have the greatest chance of Tripsacum introgression. Many traits such as endosperm abnormalities, tassel seed, albinos, tunicate glumes, tassel-tipped ears, fasciated and branched ear, and male spikelets between rows of kernels were observed. Although the genetic basis of many traits is unknown, mutations, epistatic effects or expression of Tripsacum chromatin are possible causes. The number of abnormal and tripsacoid traits observed in 20-chromosome recovered maizes indicates genetic transfer from Tripsacum to the maize genome.  相似文献   

2.
The expression of gene(s) governing apomictic reproduction inTripsacum provides the best foundation for comparing the effectiveness of apomictic reproduction in a series of maize-Tripsacum hybrids. Several 38-chromosome, apomictic maize-Tripsacum hybrids are available which possess the gene(s) conferring apomictic reproduction fromTripsacum. Without a base line for comparison, studies directed towards discerning the successful transfer or effectiveness of gene expression in a maize background are hampered. The objectives of this study are to compare the reproductive features found in apomicticTripsacum with those in apomictic maize-Tripsacum hybrids. In addition, this study determined the feasibility of utilizing these maize-Tripsacum hybrid materials to continue an attempt to transfer the genes into a pure maize background. The frequency and occurrence of five unique reproductive features found in apomictic accessions ofTripsacum dactyloides were compared to the reproductive behaviours exhibited in the maize-Tripsacum hybrids. Results indicate the genes controlling apomixis in tetraploidTripsacum are fully functional in maize-Tripsacum hybrids with diploid and triploid maize constitutions. The ability of theTripsacum apomictic genes to retain full expression provides evidence to continue their transfer to a diploid or tetraploid maize background.The use of company names in this publication does not imply endorsement by the USDA-ARS, or the product names or criticism of similar ones not mentioned. All programs and services of the U.S. Department of Agriculture are offered on a nondiscriminatory basis without regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age, marital status, or handicap.  相似文献   

3.
Polyploid plants in the genus Tripsacum, a wild relative of maize, reproduce through gametophytic apomixis of the diplosporous type, an asexual mode of reproduction through seed. Moving gene(s) responsible for the apomictic trait into crop plants would open new areas in plant breeding and agriculture. Efforts to transfer apomixis from Tripsacum into maize at CIMMYT resulted in numerou intergeneric F1 hybrids obtained from various Tripsacum species. A bulk-segregant analysis was carried out to identify molecular markers linked to diplospory in T. dactyloides. This was possible because of numerous genome similarities among related species in the Andropogoneae. On the basis of maize RFLP probes, three restriction fragments co-segregating with diplospory were identified in one maize-Tripsacum dactyloides F1 population that segregated 1∶1 for the mode of reproduction. The markers were also found to be linked in the maize RFLP map, on the distal end of the long arm of chromosome 6. These results support a simple inheritance of diplospory in Tripsacum. Manipulation of the mode of reproduction in maize-Tripsacum backcross generations, and implications for the transfer of apomixis into maize, are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
 DNA fingerprinting verified hybrid plants obtained by crossing Eastern gamagrass, Tripsacum dactyloides L., and perennial teosinte, Zea diploperennis Iltis, Doebley & R. Guzmán. Pistillate inflorescences on these hybrids exhibit characteristics intermediate to the key morphological traits that differentiate domesticated maize from its wild relatives: (1) a pair of female spikelets in each cupule; (2) exposed kernels not completely covered by the cupule and outer glumes; (3) a rigid, non-shattering rachis; (4) a polystichous ear. RFLP analysis was employed to investigate the possibility that traits of domesticated maize were derived from hybridization between perennial teosinte and Tripsacum. Southern blots of restriction digested genomic DNA of parent plants, F1, and F2 progeny from two different crosses were probed with RFLP markers specifically associated with changes in pistillate inflorescence architecture that signal maize domestication. Pairwise analysis of restriction patterns showed traits considered missing links in the origin of maize correlate with alleles derived from Tripsacum, and the same alleles are stably inherited in second generation progeny from crosses between Tripsacum and perennial teosinte. Received: 11 October 1996/Accepted:8 November 1996  相似文献   

5.
Cytogenetic evidence suggests that Tripsacum andersonii may be a natural hybrid between Zea and Tripsacum. In this paper we show sequences that hybridize to the transposable elements Mul and Spm are found in T. andersonii and all Zea species examined. However, no hybridizable sequences are observed in the five other Tripsacum species surveyed. These results suggest that Mu and Spm elements became components of the Zea genome after the divergence of Zea and Tripsacum, and they strongly support the cytological evidence that T. andersonii is a Zea-Tripsacum hybrid. Examination of nuclear ribosomal genes of T. andersonii also supports the hybridization hypothesis and identifies the Zea parent as Zea luxurians. The Tripsacum parent could not be conclusively identified, but the ribosomal gene data suggest that the species of Tripsacum section Fasiculata most closely resemble T. andersonii. Restriction site patterns of two chloroplast DNA sequences indicate that the maternal parent was a species of Tripsacum. These results are complemented by morphological evidence regarding the origin of T. andersonii.  相似文献   

6.
Tripsacum-maize interaction: a novel cytogenetic system   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
de Wet JM  Harlan JR 《Genetics》1974,78(1):493-502
The genera Zea and Tripsacum cross readily when they are not isolated by gametophytic barriers, and it has been postulated that intergeneric introgression played a role in the evolution of maize. The basic x = 9 Tripsacum and x = 10 Zea genomes have little cytological affinity for each other in hybrids that combine 10 Zea with 18 Tripsacum chromosomes. However, one to four Tripsacum chromosomes sometimes associate with Zea chromosomes in hybrids between Z. mays (2n = 20) and T. dactyloides (2n = 72). These hybrids with 10 Zea and 36 Tripsacum chromosomes frequently produce functional female gametes with 36 Tripsacum chromosomes only. When they are pollinated with maize, their offspring again have 36 Tripsacum and 10 maize chromosomes, but the Tripsacum genome is contaminated with maize genetic material. In these individuals, intergenome pairing is the rule, and when they are pollinated with maize, their offspring have 36 Tripsacum and 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, or 20 Zea chromosomes. Plants with 36 Tripsacum and 20 Zea chromosomes behave cytologically as alloploids, although the Tripsacum genome is contimated with maize, and one basic maize genome is contaminated with with Tripsacum genetic material. When they are pollinated with maize, offspring with 18 Tripsacum and 20 Zea chromosome are obtained. Further successive backcrosses with maize selectively eliminate Tripsacum chromosomes, and eventually plants with 2n = 20 Zea chromosomes are recovered. Many of these maize plants are highly "tripsacoid." Strong gametophytic selection for essentially pure Zea gametes, however, eliminates all obvious traces of Tripsacum morphology within a relatively few generations.  相似文献   

7.
Tripsacum andersonii Gray (Gramineae) is a species with 2n = 64 chromosomes. Chromosome behaviour during meiosis of microsporogenesis suggests that the species combines three homologous haploid Tripsacum genomes of x = 18 (54 chromosomes), and an alien haploid genome of x = 10 chromosomes. Cytogenetic studies indicate that T. andersonii originated as a hybrid between a species of Tripsacum (2n = 36) and a species of Zea (2n = 20). Comparative morphology and flavonoid chemistry fail to identify the Zea species involved in this intergeneric hybrid. Chromosome morphology suggests that it was either Z. mays L. subsp. mays (domesticated maize) or subspecies mexicana (Schrad.) Iltis (annual teosinte). The Tripsacum parent probably was T. latifolium Hitchc. of Central America. It resembles T. andersonii in vegetative morphology. Tripsacum maizar Hernandez et Randolph and T. laxum Nash, which resemble T. andersonii in flavonoid chemistry, are eliminated as possible parents on the basis of growth habit and the morphology of their hybrids with maize.  相似文献   

8.
Random samples, consisting of at least 100 individual seedlings, were taken from the diploid (2n=2x=36) eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides var.dactyloides) and assayed to determine which of 12 enzyme marker loci and isozyme systems would be most informative in providing satisfactory resolution of both maize andTripsacum isozyme systems. For comparison, eight maize inbreds were included in the study to aid evaluation and comparison of the various isozyme systems. In addition, evaluations were conducted to identify if the identified optimum isozyme system could be used to detectTripsacum introgression in maize following a maize ×Tripsacum backcrossing scheme. Using the established isozyme techniques for maize (Zea mays L.), theAdh, Pgd, Cat, Est, B-Glu, Got, Idh, Tpi isozyme systems detected no polymorphism among theTripsacum individuals assayed. TheEst andB-Glu systems forTripsacum were unscorable due to poor staining and resolution. TheAcp, Mdh, Pgm, andPhi isozyme systems were found to be satisfactory markers for differentiating between eastern gamagrass individuals as well as detectingTripsacum introgression in maize. The availability of useful isozyme systems which can simultaneously provide significant isozyme resolution of maize,Tripsacum and maize-Tripsacum backcross hybrids, on a single gel system, will be useful for the detection of marker assistedTripsacum introgression into maize. In addition, the identification of a set of variable biochemical markers should also assist breeding, selection and genetic manipulations in eastern gamagrass.The use of company names in this publication does not imply endorsement by the USDA-ARS, or the product names of criticism of similar ones not mentioned. All programs and services of the U.S. Department of Agriculture are offered on a nondiscriminatory basis without regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age, marital status, or handicap.  相似文献   

9.
Some of the derivatives of a cross of maize (Zea mays L.) × Tripsacum dactyloides (L) L (2n = 72) have abnormal development leading to strange and striking morphologies. The Tripsacum chromosomes in these “tripsacoid” maize plants (with Tripsacum-like characteristics) were eliminated and the maize chromosomes were recovered through repeated backcrossing to maize. As an initial attempt to analyze the DNA alterations in tripsacoid maize, we have detected a few restriction site changes in the ribosomal DNA repeat of these plants (Hpa II, Bal I, Sst I, Mbo II, and Sph I) and a new Sph I site was mapped to the spacer region between the 26S and 17S genes. Several possible mechanisms for the generation of a new restriction site are discussed, and we propose that the transient presence of Tripsacum genome during the backcrossing in some way induced a rapid amplification and fixation of new restriction sites in a relatively short period of time.  相似文献   

10.
Antibody systems were produced in rabbits by immunization with antigen systems from seed ofZea mays, Z. mexicana andTripsacum dactyloides. Antigen systems were generally ranked in the following order using Zeaantibody systems: Zea > Tripsacum > Elyonurus ≈ Bothriochloa > Coix ≈ Manisuris > Andro-pogon ? Triticum. Tripsacum antibody systems also ranked these antigen systems in a similar order except that Tripsacum > Zea, and Manisuris ≈ Bothriochloa ≈ Elyonurus. Some Tripsacum species produced anomalous results. Serology suggests that Zea and Tripsacum should be placed together in the subtribe Tripsacinae of the tribe Andropogoneae: the tribe Maydeae is probably an unnatural assemblage. Tripsacum and Zea have probably evolved from ancestors with affinities to the subtribes Rottboellinae and Bothriochloeae of the tribe Andropogoneae. The high degree of serological correspondence shown by Elyonurus to Zea suggests a close common ancestry, but Manisuris appears no more similar to Tripsacum than do other genera of the Rottboellinae and Bothriochloeae. By polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, no differences were found between maize and teosinte from Mexico and north Guatemala. Teosinte from south Guatemala consistently lacked bands present in both maize and Mexican teosinte but shared no greater similarity to Tripsacum and cannot therefore be considered as tripsacoid. The high degree of band homology between maize and Mexican teosinte supports a parental relationship and it is suggested that Mexican teosinte represents the germ plasm from which maize was domesticated. Neither electro-phoretic nor serological results supported the hypothesized hybrid (viz. Zea x Manisuris) origin of Tripsacum.  相似文献   

11.
The patterns of esterase and peroxidase isoenzymes, subunits of zein-2 fraction and protomers of SDS-protein complex of Zea mays L. × Tripsacum dactyloides L. hybrids and their parents were compared. The study has been made to detect specific to Tripsacum isoesterases and isoperoxidases, zein subunits and SDS-protein protomers which could be used as markers for introgression of gene loci encoding these proteins from Tripsacum into hybrids of Tripsacum with Zea mays. Isoesterases and isoperoxidases as well protomers of SDS-protein complex specific to Tripsacum were detected in all hybrids analyzed. Zein subunits, specific to Tripsacum were detected in some of the analyzed hybrids which i that introgression frequency of the loci encoding proteins studied was different. Chromosome counts taken on the examined hybrids showed the addition of 9 – 13 Tripsacum chromosomes to maize chromosome complement.  相似文献   

12.
Little is known about the natural enemies of the leafhopperDalbulus spp. (Homoptera: Cicadellidae). Searches for its dryinid (wasps) parasitoids were made in Jalisco, Mexico. Jalisco contains the greatest number ofDalbulus species, and is considered to be near to the center of origin of this leafhopper genus and its host plants: maize, teosintes (Zea spp.) and gamagrasses (Tripsacum spp.). The dryinidGonatopus bartletti was found parasitizingD. maidis on maize and on annual teosinteZea mays spp.parviglumis. G. flavipes was found parasitizingD. elimatus on perennial teosinteZ. perennis; and a new speciesG. moyaraygozai andAnteon ciudadi parasitizingD. quinquenotatus onTripsacum pilosum andT. dactyloides. Parasitism by dryinids was found at altitudes of 680–2,000 m.Dalbulus maidis, the leafhopper species which causes the greatest losses in maize in Latin America, was found to be parasitized from 680–1,760 m. TheDalbulus species associated with annual host plants (maize andZ. mays spp.parviglumis) were parasitized by dryinids during the rainy season, while theDalbulus species associated with perennial host plants (Z. perennis andTripsacum) were parasitized by dryinids during both the rainy and dry season. The greatest diversity of dryinid parasitoids ofDalbulus spp. and the highest levels of parasitism were recorded from perennial plants, indicating that such species are reservoirs of natural enemies ofDalbulus spp.  相似文献   

13.
The American Maydinae genera Zea and Tripsacum cross readily when not isolated from each other by gametophytic barriers, and it has been suggested that intergeneric introgression played a role in the evolution of maize. Four Zea chromosomes pair with members of at least one basic genome of tetraploid Tripsacum, and in hybrids involving octaploid Tripsacum all 10 chromosomes of the basic maize genome frequently compete successfully in synapsis with Tripsacum chromosomes. Hybrids that combine 36 Tripsacum and 10 maize chromosomes are female fertile. When they are pollinated by maize their offspring have 36 Tripsacum and 20 maize chromosomes, or again have 36 Tripsacum and 10 maize chromosomes, but the 10 Zea chromosomes are contributed by the new pollen parent. Later backcross generations also include plants with 36 Tripsacum and 12, 14, 16, or 18 maize chromosomes. Individuals with 2n = 56 produce an abundance of offspring with 18 Tripsacum and 20 maize chromosomes when backcrossed with maize. Further backcrossing results in elimination of Tripsacum chromosomes, and eventually plants with 2n = 20 Tripsacum-contaminated maize chromosomes are obtained. Two generations of selfing restore full fertility to these 2n = 20 plants and eliminate all obvious traces of Tripsacum morphology.  相似文献   

14.
Maize (Zea mays L.) is a valuable commodity throughout the world, but corn rootworms (Chrysomelidae: Diabrotica spp.) often cause economic damage and increase production costs. Current rootworm management strategies have limitations, and in order to create viable management alternatives, researchers have been developing novel maize lines using Eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides L.) germplasm, a wild relative of maize that is resistant to rootworms. Ten maize Tripsacum‐introgressed inbred lines derived from recurrent selection of crosses with gamagrass and teosinte (Zea diploperennis Iltis) recombinants and two public inbred lines were assessed for susceptibility to western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) and yield in a two‐year field study. Two experimental maize inbred lines, SDG11 and SDG20, had mean root damage ratings that were significantly lower than the susceptible public line B73. Two other experimental maize inbred lines, SDG12 and SDG6, appeared tolerant to rootworm damage because they exhibited yield increases after rootworm infestation in both years. In the majority of cases, mean yield per plant of experimental maize lines used in yield analyses was equal to or exceeded that of the public inbred lines B73 and W64A. Our study indicates that there is potential to use Tripsacum‐introgressed maize germplasm in breeding programs to enhance plant resistance and/or tolerance to corn rootworms, although further research on insect resistance and agronomic potential of this germplasm needs to be conducted in F1 hybrids.  相似文献   

15.
A survey of zeins in tripsacoid and non-tripsacoid races of maize from Mesoamerica and from South America, annual teosinte, perennial species of Zea and species of Tripsacum revealed at least 33 zein proteins as determined by isoelectric focusing. Zea and Tripsacum and generally also species within these genera are characterized by distinct combinations of zein proteins. Maize is extensively heterogenous, and spans the complete spectrum of zeins present in wild Zea taxa. A comparison of zein proteins failed to distinguish between introgression of maize with Tripsacum or teosinte. The ease with which maize crosses naturally with wild Zea taxa, and the rarity of hybrids with Tripsacum essentially rule out natural Tripsacum introgression as a mode of racial evolution in maize.  相似文献   

16.
C. A. Grant 《Grana》2013,52(3):177-184
Scanning electron microscopy was used to examine the wall sculpturing of pollen from Zea mays L. ssp. mays (maize), Zea mays ssp. mexicana (Schrad.) Iltis (teosinte), Zea perennis (Hitchc.) Reeves and Mangelsdorf (perennial teosinte), and two species of Tripsacum L. The Zea taxa are shown to possess similar pollen types, with spinules scattered regularly over the exine surface. Tripsacum exhibits a distinctly reticuloid pattern, with spinules clumped into isolated lacunae. Hybrids between Zea and Tripsacum are either intermediate in exine pattern or similar to Tripsacum, depending on the genome combination.  相似文献   

17.
Feature article     
Domesticated maize emerged from human selection, exploitation, and cultivation of natural recombinants between two wild grasses that had novel characteristics desired by humans for food. Crossing experiments reconstructing prototypes of ancient archaeological specimens demonstrate how the simple flowering spike of the wild relatives of maize was transformed into the prolific grain-bearing ear within a few generations of intergenomic recombination between teosinte andTripsacum. The high degree of morphological similarities of segregating intercross progeny to archaeological specimens from Tehuacán, Oaxaca, and Tamaulipas provides strong support for this evolutionary scenario. Comparative genomic analysis of maize, teosinte, andTripsacum confirms that maize has inherited unique polymorphisms from aTripsacum ancestor and other unique polymorphisms from a teosinte progenitor. This supports the hypothesis thatTripsacum introgression provided the mutagenic action for the transformation of the teosinte spike into the maize ear. This model for the origin of maize explains its sudden appearance, rapid evolutionary trajectory, and genesis of its spectacular biodiversity.  相似文献   

18.
Knob heterochromatin homology in maize and its relatives   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Summary We have characterised the major DNA sequence component of knob heterochromatin in maize, teosinte andTripsacum. Sequence analysis of this DNA gives strong support to the proposal that maize originated by selection of variants in teosinte. In situ hybridization has confirmed that this repeating DNA sequence, which is the major component of maize knob heterochromatin, is also the major component of knobs in teosinte,Zea diploperennis andTripsacum. In Southern blot hybridizations the repeat has a similar basic organization in all taxa;Tripsacum, however, is differentiated from maize and teosinte by a number of sequence features. Maize and teosinte knob heterochromatin are indistinguishable with regard to the distribution of mutations in the 180-bp repeat and the presence and organization of a 202-bp variant sequence. The knob DNA sequence was not detectable in three species ofCoix, an Old World genus of the Maydeae.Within the repeat unit is a 27-bp region that shows no sequence changes in maize, teosinte orTripsacum. The remainder of the repeat unit has randomly distributed nucleotide changes. The presence of the conserved sequence region suggests that knob DNA may have a functional role in the nucleus.  相似文献   

19.
One element of gametophytic apomixis is unreduced embryo sac (ES) formation, which often occurs precociously displacing or replacing meiosis and causing apospory or diplospory, respectively. This study evaluated a premise that apomixis may evolve in hybridogenous plants that contain duplicate sets of allelically divergent ovule development heterochrony genes. The duplicate sets of genes would belong to duplicate genomic regions that are recombinationally isolated from each other (no gene flow) by allopolyploidy or paleopolyploidy, and this isolation would genetically stabilize apomixis. For apomixis to evolve, the ancestral donors of the duplicate regions must have differed from each other in timing of megasporogenesis, ES formation and embryony such that epigenetic misexpressions, or competitions in expression, of the duplicate heterochrony genes in hybridogenous derivatives would cause apomixis. Herein, we report substantial heterochrony in onset timing of germline stages among several sexual diploid Tripsacum genotypes, which may have been progenitors of apomictic polyploid Tripsacum. Tripsacum floridanum and Tripsacum zopilotense genotypes entered meiosis early. The former advanced rapidly through ES formation, but the latter entered a lengthy lag phase prior to ES formation. In two Tripsacum dactyloides var. dactyloides genotypes, meiosis occurred late and was followed by a distinct lag phase prior to ES formation. Likewise, the T. dactyloides var. meridonale genotype entered meiosis late, but the lag phase was brief. These differences appear to reflect allelic diversity at loci responsible for onset timing of different germline development stages within and across species and possibly across the recombinationally isolated duplicate chromosome regions in the Tripsacum paleopolyploid haplome (x = 18). Unique combinations of divergent alleles in hybridogenous plants coupled with polyploidy induced gene misexpressions may be required for apomixis to evolve. Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

20.
 Imprinting in the endosperm of angiosperms, a phenomena by which expression of alleles differs depending on whether they originate from the male or female parent, has been shown to explain most failure of interploidy or interspecific crosses in plants. Because of imprinting, seeds develop normally only if a specific dosage is represented in the endosperm, with the relative contributions of genomes in the ratio of two maternal doses to one paternal dose (2m:1p). In Tripsacum, a wild relative of maize, all polyploids reproduce through the diplosporous type of apomixis. Diplospory results from meiotic failure in megasporocytes that develop into eight-nucleate unreduced female gametophytes. The male gametophytes remain unaffected. Flow cytometry was used to determine ploidy levels in the endosperm of both apomictic and sexual Tripsacum accessions. In both cases, fertilization appeared to involve only one sperm nucleus. Therefore, endosperm of apomictic Tripsacum develops normally even though the ratio of genomic contributions deviates from the normal 2m:1p ratio. Ratios of 2:1, 4:1, 4:2, 8:1 and 8:2 were observed, depending on both the ploidy level of the parents and the mode of reproduction. Thus, specific dosage effects are seemingly not required for endosperm development in Tripsacum. These findings suggest that evolution of diplosporous apomixis might have been restricted to species with few or no imprinting requirements, and the findings have strong implications regarding the transfer of apomixis to sexually reproducing crops. Received: 17 February 1997 / Revision accepted: 7 July 1997  相似文献   

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