Lönnig WE et al.1994
- Authors:
Lönnig WE. Saedler H.
- Title:
The homeotic Macho mutant of Antirrhinum majus reverts to wild-type or
mutates to the homeotic plena phenotype.
- Reference location:
Molecular & General Genetics. 245(5):636-43, 1994 Dec 1.
- Abstract:
Plants of Antirrhinum majus carrying the semidominant Macho alleles of the
plena gene display carpelloid sepals and staminoid petals, but the two
inner flower whorls of stamens and carpels are normal and produce fertile
gametes. In the recessive plena mutant, in contrast, the two outer whorls
are normal whereas the stamens are largely or entirely petaloid and the
carpels sepaloid, thus producing weakly male-fertile or fully sterile
lines. Two new plena and two new Macho alleles have been induced in
transposon tagging experiments. Genetic and molecular analysis revealed
that the two contrasting mutant phenotypes are caused by mutations in one
and the same gene: Several wild-type plants appeared among 27,000 F1
plants of a cross between Macho female plants and wild-type males bearing
the active transposons Tam1 and Tam3. One of these plants segregated plena
mutants, three showed reversions to wild-type and another two segregated
Macho plants, possibly representing somatic reversions. Additional
evidence was provided by an allelism test of Macho x plena. Molecular
analysis has independently corroborated the genetical results. Moreover,
the double mutant Macho/deficiens shows only carpels and plena/deficiens
only sepals, which is in accord with combinatorial models for homeotic
flower formation presented recently.
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