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Behavior of potato gametoclonal plants against the necrotic strain of potato Y potyvirus

TitoloBehavior of potato gametoclonal plants against the necrotic strain of potato Y potyvirus
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2007
AutoriGrammatikaki, G., Avgelis A., and Sonnino Andrea
RivistaRussian Journal of Plant Physiology
Volume54
Paginazione507 - 512
Data di pubblicazione2007///
Parole chiaveAnther culture, Gametoclonal variation, Potato virus Y, Resistance, Solanum tuberosum
Abstract

A total of 59 Solanum tuberosum androgenetic plants have been obtained through anther culture, 47 of which derived from a tetraploid clone, seven from a diploid hybrid, and five from an anther-derived clone. About two thirds of the anther-derived plants were dihaploids, a few were monohaploids (5.08%) or aneuploids (6.78%), whereas the tetraploid genotype generated about a third of tetraploids. Seven hundred twenty seven R1 plants arisen from tubers of the androgenetic potatoes were mechanically inoculated with the necrotic strain of the potato Y potyvirus (PVYN) and grown in a glasshouse. Fifty days after inoculation, the presence of PVYN in R1 plants was detected by DAS-ELISA (Double Autibody Sandwich). Only three plants (0.4%) of genotype H2-258 exhibited local necrotic symptoms (hypersensitivity reaction) suggesting the presence of the N y gene, and this extreme resistance is epistatic to hypersensitive resistance. The immunity (R y-gene) to PVYN was retained through anther culturing and present at all levels of ploidy. The pattern of segregation for immunity was differentiated according to the ploidy level of the anther-derived plants. This changed segregation pattern may be due to a loss of resistance during the culturing, when an endoreduplication has taken place or to the possible regeneration from Second-division restituted unreduced microspores. Anyway, this segregation pattern must be taken into account when gametoclones are used in genetic studies. © 2007 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.

Note

Cited By (since 1996): 1Export Date: 26 August 2010Source: Scopus

URLhttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-34547236031&partnerID=40&md5=798178e07d4065c2161d7a00c50ccb4d
Citation Key342