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Distorted segregation and linkage of alcohol dehydrogenase genes in Camellia japonica L. (Theacease)
Authors:Jonathan F. Wendel  Clifford R. Parks
Affiliation:(1) Biology Department, University of North Carolina, 27514 Chapel Hill, North Carolina;(2) Present address: Genetics department, North Carolina State University, 27695-7614 Raleigh, North Carolina
Abstract:Alcohol dehydrogenase isozymes in Camellia japonica are encoded by two genes, Adh-1 and Adh-2. Both loci are expressed in seeds, and their products randomly associate into intragenic and intergenic dimers. Electrophoresis of leaf extracts reveals only the products of Adh-2. Formal genetic analysis indicated that the two Adh loci are tightly linked (combined estimate of r=0.004). Most segregations fit expected Mendelian ratios, but in some families distorted segregation was observed at Adh-1, Adh-2, or both loci. The deficient progeny class varied across families, and in two apparent backcrosses three rather than two phenotypic classes were recovered. The mechanism underlying these distortions is not known, but evidence is presented that suggests that the phenomenon is genic or segmental in nature. Plausible hypotheses include linkage of the Adh structural genes with a gametophytic self-incompatibility locus, translocation heterozygosity involving the segment bearing Adh-1 and Adh-2, or a combination of these two mechanisms.
Keywords:alcohol dehydrogenase  isozymes  Camellia japonica  distorted segregation  linkage
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