Pisum Genetics |
Volume 24 |
1992 |
Research Reports |
page 13 |
A new allele, stbs, at the St locus
Apisitwanich, S. and Swiecicki, W.K.
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Department of Genetics, Kasetsart University Bangkok, Thailand Inst. of Plant Genetics, Polish Academy of Sciences Poznan, Poland |
In 1980 at Wiatrowo, two independently induced mutant lines, Wt11301 and Wt11311, with stipules of reduced size (so called "butterfly stipules") were selected following treatment of cv. Paloma with 200r Nf + 0.014% NEU. Segregation in the M2 families showed the recessive nature of both mutants. Reciprocal crosses between Wt11311 and Wt11301 showed the two mutations were at the same locus. The F1 plants from reciprocal crosses between Wt11311 and Wt11288 (st = stipules reduced) had butterfly stipules and the F2 segregated in accordance with the ratio 3 butterfly stipules : 1 reduced stipules. Thus it appeared that the trait butterfly stipules is controlled by an allele dominant to st but recessive to St (normal, wild-type stipules). We suggest symbol stbs for the intermediate allele conferring butterfly stipules. The three phenotypes are illustrated in Fig. 1.
No significant linkages were detected for chromosome 3 markers st, b and m in the F2 of cross Wt11311 (stbs B m) x Wt11288 (st b M), but a selection with genotype stbs b M was isolated and included in the Genetics Stock Centre as Wt11323. The larger surface area of stbs stipules (instead of the strongly reduced st stipules) is sometimes useful in cases where other markers influencing stipule traits (e.g. wb, sil) are under study.
Fig. 1. The stipule phenotype conferred by alleles St (bottom), stbs (middle) and st (top). The dominance order is St > stbs > st.