SELECTION AND IDENTIFICATION OF A SPONTANEOUS ALIEN CHROMOSOME TRANSLOCATION IN WHEAT

1 Department of Agronomy and Range Science, University of California, Davis, California 95616

A wheat (Triticum aestivum L. emend Thell) disomic addition line (2n = 6x = 44), SH1–152–2, with a pair of Elytrigia pontica (Podp.) Holub 2n = 10x = 70 [syn. Agropyron elongatum (Host) P.B.] chromosomes controlling blue aleurone color was crossed with a short-statured spring wheat `Sonora 64' (T. aestivum). Isoline pairs of blue-disomic addition lines and nonblue euploid lines were produced by selecting plants segregating for blue aleurone for 12 generations. Nineteen of 20 blue aleurone lines were 2n = 44 addition lines, and one had 2n = 42 chromosomes. Several lines of evidence showed that this line had a spontaneous translocation in which the ß arm of wheat chromosome 4A was replaced by an Elytrigia chromosome arm carrying the blue aleurone gene. The Elytrigia chromosome in SH1–152–2 appeared to be homologous with E. pontica chromosome 4el1, which also carries the blue aleurone gene. It was concluded that the spontaneous translocation originated from simultaneous misdivision of univalents and subsequent reunion at the centromere of chromosome arm 4Aalpha with the Elytrigia chromosome arm.

Submitted on February 1, 1980
Revised on April 3, 1981




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Crop Sci.Home page
C.O. Qualset, K.M. Soliman, C.-C. Jan, J. Dvorak, P.E. McGuire, and H.E. Vogt
Registration of UC66049 Triticum aestivum Blue Aleurone Genetic Stock
Crop Sci., January 1, 2005; 45(1): 432 - 432.
[Full Text] [PDF]