cytoplasmic male sterility in minor crop - sorghum
TRANSCRIPT
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BY ISHTIAQ SHARIQ
ROLL # 2 SEMESTER 8th
PLANT BREEDING AND GENETICS B. Sc. (Hons.) Agriculture
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KINGDOM Plantae
ORDER Poales
FAMILY Poaceae
GENUS Sorghum Moench
SPECIE Sorghum bicolor L.
Moench
BINOMIAL NAME
Sorghum bicolor L. Moench
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• Sorghum is cultivated in the semi-arid tropics in 86 countries.
• Prodcution was 120,800 tonnes (FAO Stats 2012-13)
• Diverse origin and probably arose from S. Verticilliflorum
• Domestication began around 3000 BCE
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PAKISTAN
2011-12
Area ('000'Ha) Production ('000' ton)
YIELD
(Kgs/ Ha) (Mds/Acre)
213.5 137.1 642.2 7
The Ministry of National Food Security and Research (NFS&R)
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• The cultivated sorghum taxa have been classified into five basic races (bicolor, caudatum, durra, guinea, and kafir),
• 10 hybrid races (e.g., bicolor-caudatum)
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• When sterility is due to the failure of functional anthers or pollen, it is
termed male sterility (Poehlman 4th ed.)
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• Genetic male sterility is manifested through the action of nuclear genes inhibiting normal development of anthers and pollen
• Precise stage where pollen development is interupted, varies specie to specie or specific male sterelity gene.
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• Male sterelity conditioned by recessive allele (ms)
• Normal anther and pollen because of (Ms) allele
• Diploid species would have constitution:
–Male sterile = msms
–Male fertile = Msms, MsMs
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• Maintainance of male sterile gene in population is very necessary
• A pure population of genetically male sterile plant is impossible
• Male sterile gene is maintained if seeds from the male sterile plants only are harvested and used to plant the next generation.
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• Seed from a male sterile plant (rosins) may be pollinated by either homozygous
(MsMs) or heterozygous (Msms) male fertile plants.)
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msms MsMs X
Msms (self)
X
F1
F2 25 % msms
F3 33 % msms
25 % MsMs 50 % Msms
66 % Msms
CASE 2, FURTHER GENERATIONS, ONLY MALE STERILE HARVESTED IN F2 AND ONWARD
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• Eliminate emasculation in hybridization
• Increase natural crosspollination in selfpollinated crops
• Facilitate commercial hybrid seed production.
UTILIZATION IN A BREEDING PROGRAM
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• Cytoplasmic male sterility is controlled by the cytoplasm, but may be influenced by genes in chromosomes
• Cytoplasm causing sterelity referred as (sterile cytoplasm (S) or (CMS)
• Cytoplasm developing functional anthers and pollens designated (N)
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• Sterile cytoplasm results when nuclear chromosome introduced in foreign cytoplasm.
• For example, cytoplasmic male sterility in sorghum was obtained by transferring kafir chromosomes into cytoplasm of
milo.
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• Male sterility is not expressed when the milo chromosomes are in milo cytoplasm.
• The kafir chromosomes were introduced into milo cytoplasm by pollination of a milo plant with kafir pollen, and successively crossing the progeny as the female back to kafir as the male, until the entire set of kafir chromosomes were recovered.
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• Similar procedures to obtain obtain cytoplasmic male sterile in wheat
and other crops
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• Because the cytoplasm is transferred through the egg only, the sperm
contributing an insignificantly small bit of cytoplasm to the zygote, cytoplasmic
male sterility is transmitted only through the female plant
CONCEPTUAL POINT
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• The action of cytoplasmically controlled male sterility may be modified by the action of fertility restoring genes located in the chromosomes.
• RfRf = Sterile cyto. Becomes inoperative
• rfrf = (Cytoplasm is sterile) Sterility is expressed
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• The parent with the sterile cytoplasm necessarily is used as the female and the fertility restoring genes are contributed by the male parent
• The nuclear genes and cytoplasm interact to produce male sterileand male fertile plants
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CMS rfrf RfRf N or CMS
Rf rf CMS
Rfrf CMS OFFSPRING
SPERM NO CYTO
FEMALE MALE
EGG
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• The restorers should be taller than male steriles usually by 0.1 to 0.8m, and
possess good pollen shedding ability
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• The milo cytoplasm male-sterility system still remains the most widely used because the hybrids based on this
cytoplasm produce sufficient heterosis (20–30%) over the best available pure
lines in sorghum