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Revisiting and Revising the Self-Incompatibility Genetics of Phalaris coerulescensPeter Langridgea, Ute Baumanna, and Juan Juttneraa University of Adelaide ARC Special Research Centre for Basic and Applied Plant Molecular Biology Department of Plant Science Waite Campus Glen Osmond SA 5064 Australia plangrid@waite.adelaide.edu.au
In the grasses, self-incompatibility is controlled by two unlinked loci, S and Z. Previously,
A series of recent experiments, however, has shown that Bm2 in fact does not represent S. The bases for this revised conclusion are: (1) recombination between Bm2 and S. It now appears that Bm2 may be as much as 2 centimorgans away from S. Several recombinant plants have been identified that demonstrate linkage between the Bm2 and S loci; (2) sequencing of S homologs from other grasses, including members of the Phalaris genus, along with additional alleles of Phalaris coerulescens. Most Bm2-like sequences encode only a thioredoxin protein and no allelic domain. All mRNAs, moreover, show several in-frame stop codons and an ATG start directly before the thioredoxin domain. Thus, Bm2 sequences encode a novel thioredoxin, but do not contain a region that could determine allele specificity, as was previously suggested ( In summary, it is now clear that Bm2 cannot represent S. Bm2 is a gene closely linked to S that may be involved in some aspect of the self-incompatibility reaction but is unlikely to be involved in the recognition process per se.
REFERENCES
Li, X., Nield, J., Hayman, D., and Langridge, P. (1994) Cloning a putative self-incompatibility gene from the pollen of the grass Phalaris coerulescens.. Plant Cell 6:1923-1932
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