Maize Genetics
Cooperation Newsletter vol 87 2013
As provided by David Weber.
On the mechanism of haploid production by RWS
Haploids
have become one of the most effective tools in modern genetics and
breeding. When a haploid inducer
line is crossed as a male parent onto a diploid female, most kernels produced
contain a diploid embryo and a triploid endosperm; however, a portion of the
kernels has a haploid embryo and triploid endosperm. Such kernels germinate normally and grow
into haploid plants. The haploid
plants are maternal haploids because the female parent contributed the
chromosomes.
In most cases, kernels with haploid embryos are selected using the R1-nj allele of the R1 locus on chromosome 10. The kernels with haploid embryos are germinated, treated with a chromosome-doubling agent (such as colchicine), and pollen from doubled (diploid) sectors is used to self-pollinate the haploid plant. The kernels produced are doubled haploids and completely homozygous (instant inbreds).
RWS, a line developed at the University of H�enheim, St�tgart, Germany (R�ber et al., 2005, Maydica 50:275-283) is a widely used line for producing maize haploids. RWS and lines derived from it are used extensively by the corn breeding industry. However, the mechanism that haploid inducing lines produce kernels with haploid embryos is not well understood.
Two
major mechanisms have been proposed to explain how these haploid inducers might
produce kernels with haploid embryos.
First, an abnormal fertilization event might take place in
which one sperm fertilizes the two polar nuclei and the other sperm fails to
fertilize the egg of an embryo sac producing a kernel that has a triploid
endosperm and a haploid embryo.
Second, the normal double fertilization events would take place, and
then the chromosomes contributed by the female parent are eliminated from the
embryo after fertilization.
The
following experiment was performed to distinguish between these two
hypotheses. RWS (which is Bm2, Lg1, Gl1, J1, and Gl) was crossed as a male parent onto a
female parent (Mangelsdorf�s multiple chromosome tester) that is homozygous for
recessive plant-expressed mutations on five of its chromosomes (bm2, lg1, gl1, j1, and g1 on chromosomes 1, 2, 7, 8, and 10 respectively). 1200 kernels were field-planted. Of the 1108 plants that grew, 121
expressed all five of the recessive mutations (were maternal haploids). In addition, four exceptional plants
were identified that expressed only one of the mutations (one was bm2, one was lg1, one was gl1, and one
was g1). Each of these four plants had a
morphology that was typical of a monosomic plant. Kernels of this same cross were also
grown in a sand bench planting (it is only possible to classify gl1 and lg1 in sandbench plantings).
Of the 535 seedlings, 35 of the seedlings were gl1 and lg1 and one
exceptional plant was gl1 and Lg1.
Cytological analysis indicated that each of the five exceptional
plants were monosomics (2n=19).
These five exceptional plants could only be produced if chromosome loss
occurs after fertilization.
However, this experiment does not preclude the possibility that some of
the haploids were produced by an event in which a sperm failed to fertilize the
egg of an embryo sac.
Please Note: Notes submitted to the Maize Genetics
Cooperation Newsletter may be cited only with consent of authors.