Mapping and genomic targeting of the major leaf shape gene (L) in Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)

Publication Overview
TitleMapping and genomic targeting of the major leaf shape gene (L) in Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
AuthorsAndres RJ, Bowman DT, Kaur B, Kuraparthy V
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameTheoretical and applied genetics
Volume127
Issue1
Year2014
Page(s)167-177
CitationAndres RJ, Bowman DT, Kaur B, Kuraparthy V. Mapping and genomic targeting of the major leaf shape gene (L) in Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Theoretical and applied genetics. 2014; 127(1):167-177.

Abstract

KEY MESSAGE : A major leaf shape locus (L) was mapped with molecular markers and genomically targeted to a small region in the D-genome of cotton. By using expression analysis and candidate gene mapping, two LMI1 -like genes are identified as possible candidates for leaf shape trait in cotton. Leaf shape in cotton is an important trait that influences yield, flowering rates, disease resistance, lint trash, and the efficacy of foliar chemical application. The leaves of okra leaf cotton display a significantly enhanced lobing pattern, as well as ectopic outgrowths along the lobe margins when compared with normal leaf cotton. These phenotypes are the hallmark characteristics of mutations in various known modifiers of leaf shape that culminate in the mis/over-expression of Class I KNOX genes. To better understand the molecular and genetic processes underlying leaf shape in cotton, a normal leaf accession (PI607650) was crossed to an okra leaf breeding line (NC05AZ21). An F₂ population of 236 individuals confirmed the incompletely dominant single gene nature of the okra leaf shape trait in Gossypium hirsutum L. Molecular mapping with simple sequence repeat markers localized the leaf shape gene to 5.4� cM interval in the distal region of the short arm of chromosome 15. Orthologous mapping of the closely linked markers with the sequenced diploid D-genome (Gossypium raimondii) tentatively resolved the leaf shape locus to a small genomic region. RT-PCR-based expression analysis and candidate gene mapping indicated that the okra leaf shape gene (L ᵒ ) in cotton might be an upstream regulator of Class I KNOX genes. The linked molecular markers and delineated genomic region in the sequenced diploid D-genome will assist in the future high-resolution mapping and map-based cloning of the leaf shape gene in cotton.
Germplasm
This publication contains information about 2 stocks:
Stock NameGRIN IDSpeciesType
TX-2324PI 607650Gossypium hirsutumaccession
TX2324 x NC05AZ21 okra, F2Gossypium hirsutumpopulation
Image
File NameLegend
L2_TAG-127-167.jpgLeaf shape phenotypes of cotton from upper, middle, and lower nodes (left to right). [Image from Andres et al., 2014, TAG-127-167]
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication Date2014
Published Location|||
Language Abbreng
Publication Model[electronic resource].
URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00122-013-2208-4
Journal AbbreviationTheor. Appl. Genet.
ISSN1432-2242
eISSN1432-2242
LanguageEnglish
KeywordsGossypium hirsutum, Gossypium raimondii, breeding, chromosome mapping, disease resistance, flowering, gene overexpression, genes, genetic markers, leaves, lint cotton, loci, molecular cloning, mutation, phenotype