Biochemical and genetic linkage analysis of green seed color in field pea

Publication Overview
TitleBiochemical and genetic linkage analysis of green seed color in field pea
AuthorsMcCallum J, Timmerman-Vaughan G, Frew T, Russell A
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of the American Society for Horticultural Science
Volume122
Issue2
Year1997
Page(s)218-225
CitationMcCallum J, Timmerman-Vaughan G, Frew T, Russell A. Biochemical and genetic linkage analysis of green seed color in field pea. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science. 1997 Mar; 122(2):218-225.

Abstract

Developmental, environmental, and genetic factors affecting seed color were studied in the progeny of a cross between two white-flowered (aa) green cotyledon (ii) field peas (Pisum sativum L.): the pale large-seeded Marrowfat cultivar Primo and the greener small-seeded Prussian Blue OSU442-15. Changes in chlorophyll and carotenoid content during seed development of the parental genotypes were determined by high performance liquid chromatography analysis. Both cultivars accumulated similar pigment quantities per seed, but pigment loss was greater during maturation of 'Primo'. Bleached and unbleached mature seed tissues also were compared for pigment composition. Lutein was the predominant pigment in bleached cotyledons of both cultivars. Only trace amounts of pheophytins were detected in unbleached seed. In both genotypes, chlorophyll A: B ratios were approximately 1:1 in seed coats compared to 3:1 in cotyledons. Objective measurements of seed color in terms of luminance (lightness) and chrominance (hue and saturation) were made in YUV color space by video image analysis. Inheritance of seed color was studied in an F2 population derived from the 'Primo' x 'OSU442-15' cross and inbred descendants. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) for seed color were localized by interval mapping using a linkage map of 199 molecular markers spanning most of the genome and by bulked segregant analysis and selective genotyping. Four genomic regions affecting seed color were detected. A major gene accounting for 61% of the phenotypic variance in seed lightness (Y luminance component) was identified on linkage group V linked to r locus. Another major gene, which accounted for 56% of the phenotypic variance in seed hue (U chrominance component), was mapped to a linkage group containing group III and IV markers. A QTL with smaller effect on seed hue (U and V chrominance components) was detected on linkage group VII. Support for overdominant allelic interaction for a QTL on linkage group I, adjacent to the legumin locus Lg-J, was obtained by selective genotyping of the seed lightness distributional extremes.
Features
This publication contains information about 6 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
P694P694genetic_marker
Seed colorqSDCL.PrimoxOSU442-15.LGI.VQTL
Seed colorqSDCL.PrimoxOSU442-15.LGIII/IV.UQTL
Seed colorqSDCL.PrimoxOSU442-15.LGV.YQTL
Seed colorqSDCL.PrimoxOSU442-15.LGV.VQTL
Seed colorqSDCL.PrimoxOSU442-15.LGVII.UQTL
Projects
This publication contains information about 1 projects:
Project NameDescription
Pea-Green_Seed_Color-McCallum-1997
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication Date1997 Mar
Published Locationvau
Language Abbreng
Journal AbbreviationJ. Am. Soc. Hortic. Sci.
Keywordscrossing, Pisum sativum, seeds, color, flowers, cotyledons, chlorophyll, carotenoids, seed development, plant pigments, quantitative traits, loci, chromosome mapping, phenotypic variation, alleles, testa, inheritance (genetics), linkage (genetics), violaxanthin, maturation