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Genetics, Vol. 179, 2263-2273, August 2008, Copyright © 2008
doi:10.1534/genetics.108.092007
The qSD12 Locus Controls Offspring Tissue-Imposed Seed Dormancy in Rice
Xing-You Gu*,1,
E. Brent Turnipseed* and
Michael E. Foley
* Plant Science Department, South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota 57007 and
Biosciences Research Laboratory United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Fargo, North Dakota 58105
1 Corresponding author: Plant Science Department, South Dakota State University, SNP248D, Box 2140C, Brookings, SD 57007.
E-mail: xingyou.gu{at}sdstate.edu
Seed component structures were grouped into maternal and offspring (embryo and endosperm) tissues to characterize a dormancy quantitative trait locus (QTL) for tissue-specific function using a marker-assisted genetic approach. The approach was devised to test if genotypic/allelic frequencies of a marker tightly linked to the QTL deviate from Mendelian expectations in germinated and nongerminated subpopulations derived from a segregation population of partially after-ripened seeds and was applied to the dormancy QTL qSD12 and qSD7-1 in a nearly isogenic background of rice. Experimental results unambiguously demonstrated that qSD12 functions in the offspring tissue(s) and suggested that qSD7-1 may control dormancy through the maternal tissues. These experiments also provide the first solid evidence that an offspring tissue-imposed dormancy gene contributes to the segregation distortion in a mapping population developed from partially after-ripened seeds and, in part, to the germination heterogeneity of seeds from hybrid plants. Offspring and maternal tissue-imposed dormancy genes express in very early and late stages of the life cycle, respectively, and interact to provide the species with complementary adaptation strategies. The qSD12 locus was narrowed to the region of
600 kbp on a high-resolution map to facilitate cloning and marker-assisted selection of the major dormancy gene.