The Oenothera plastome mutator: effect of UV irradiation and nitroso-methyl urea on mutation frequencies |
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Authors: | Barbara B Sears and Mary B Sokalski |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Michigan State University, 48824 East Lansing, MI, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary
Oenothera plants homozygous for a recessive plastome mutator allele (pm) showed spontaneous mutation frequencies for plastome genes that are 200-fold higher than spontaneous levels. Mutations occurred at high frequencies in plants grown in the field, in a glass-house, or as leaf tip cultures under fluorescent light, indicating that the plastome mutator activity is UV-independent. However, the chlorotic sectors became visible at an earlier stage of development when seedlings were irradiated, compared to seedlings that were not exposed to UV. These results imply that the rate of sorting-out was increased by the irradiation treatment, possibly due to a decrease in the effective number of multiplication-competent plastids, or a reduction in the extent of cytoplasmic mixing. Nitroso-methyl urea treatment of seeds had a dramatic effect on mutation frequency in both wild-type and plastome mutator samples. When the background mutation rates were low, the combination of the plastome mutator nucleus and the chemical mutagenesis treatment resulted in a synergistic effect, suggesting that the plastome mutator may involve a cpDNA repair pathway. |
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Keywords: | Oenothera Plastome mutation Nitrosomethyl urea UV irradiation |
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