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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Research note: Shoot control of hypernodulation and aberrant root formation in the har1-1 mutant of Lotus japonicus

Qunyi Jiang and Peter M. Gresshoff

Functional Plant Biology 29(11) 1371 - 1376
Published: 25 November 2002

Abstract

The har1-1 mutant of Lotus japonicus B-129-S9 Gifu is characterized by two phenotypes: greater than normal nodulation (hypernodulation) and significantly inhibited root growth in the presence of its microsymbiont Mesorhizobium loti strain NZP2235. We demonstrate that the two traits co-segregate, suggesting a single genetic alteration involving developmental pleiotropy. A cross between the mutant and genotype Funakura (with wild-type root and nodule morphology) demonstrated Mendelian recessive segregation of both phenotypes (root and nodule) in 216 F2 individuals. Using DNA-amplification fingerprinting polymorphisms in Gifu har1-1 and Funakura, the mutant locus was positioned between two markers at about 7 and 13 cM distance. Reciprocal hypocotyl grafting of shoots and roots showed that the hypernodulation and reduced root phenotypes are both predominantly controlled by the shoot.

Keywords: genetic mapping, har1-1, nodulation, symbiosis, systemic control.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP01097

© CSIRO 2002

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