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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: adaptedness ; morphological and genetic differentiation ; Oryza sativa L. ; RFLP
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Indica and Japonica differentiation under the species of Oryza sativa L. has been documented using morphological characters, isozyme and DNA markers. We illustrate marker assisted analysis of genetic differentiation with a sample of RFLP and isozyme data from 111 accessions of rice lines and compare it to morphological differentiation based on Cheng and Wang' morphological character index. The results lead to three main conclusions: (1) Among the 92 polymorphic cloned probes deliberately selected, 41 were highly associated with Indica-Japonica differentiation, suggesting such differentiation was an accumulative process of gene change at multiple loci; (2) There exist two main types of relationships between morphological and genetic differentiation. For well differentiated Indica and Japonica (as the case in the control subset), morphology and genomic constitutions are synchronously specialized. For incompletely differentiated rice lines (as the case in the subset of DH lines), morphological differentiation and genetic differentiation are asynchronous. (3)Synthetic or incompletely differentiated rice lines with different genomic constitutions are often adapted to specific environments. These results indicate that marker alleles provide applied breeders with effective ways to identify, track, and incorporate regions of chromosomes governing adaptedness to specific target environments into improved cultivars.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1572-9788
    Keywords: Oryza sativa L. ; extent of genotypic divergence ; heterosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The magnitude of heterosis in F1 hybrids is related not only to the performance of parents per se but also to the genetic diversity between two parents. The extent of genotypic divergence between hybrid rice parents was investigated at the molecular level, using two subsets of rice materials: a subset of doubled haploid (DH) lines derived from an Indica × Japonica cross (Gui630/02428) and another subset of Indica or Japonica lines representative of a broad spectrum of the Asian cultivated rice gene pool, including landraces, primitive cultivars, historically important cultivars, modern elite cultivars, super rice and parents of superior hybrids. 57 entries deliberately selected from the 81-DH lines (in total) were testcrossed to two widely used rice lines in China, photoperiod-sensitive genic male sterile (PGMS) N422s and thermo-sensitive genic male sterile (TGMS) Peiai64s. Results of the two sets of test-cross F1 populations showed congruently that parental genotypic divergence has a relatively low impact on heterosis for the two yield components, i.e., panicle number and 1000-grain weight, but it has a great bearing on fertility parameters, i.e., filled grains per plant and seedset. Heterosis for grain yield in the two test-cross populations exhibited a sharp maximum when the proportion of Japonica alleles in the male parent was between 50 and 60%, so was the heterosis for fertility parameters correspondingly. Thus fertility parameters were the most sensitive and important factors which were influenced by the extent of parental genotypic divergence. Moreover, our results showed that parents with moderate extent of genotypic divergence played an important role in the use of inter-subspecific rice heterosis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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