Exploiting the ZIP4 homologue within the wheat Ph1 locus has identified two lines exhibiting homoeologous crossover in wheat-wild relative hybrids

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Author
Rey, María-Dolores
Martín, Azahara C.
Higgins, Janet
Swarbreck, David
Uauy, Cristobal
Shaw, Peter
Publisher
SpringerDate
2017Subject
Ph1ZIP4
Homoeologues
Synapsis
Crossover
Wheat
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Show full item recordAbstract
Despite possessing related ancestral genomes,
hexaploid wheat behaves as a diploid during
meiosis. The wheat Ph1 locus promotes accurate synapsis
and crossover of homologous chromosomes. Interspecific
hybrids between wheat and wild relatives are
exploited by breeders to introgress important traits from
wild relatives into wheat, although in hybrids between
hexaploid wheat and wild relatives, which possess only
homoeologues, crossovers do not take place during
meiosis at metaphase I. However, in hybrids between
Ph1 deletion mutants and wild relatives, crossovers do
take place. A single Ph1 deletion (ph1b) mutant has
been exploited for the last 40 years for this activity.
We show here that chemically induced mutant lines,
selected for a mutation in TaZIP4-B2 within the Ph1
locus, exhibit high levels of homoeologous crossovers
when crossed with wild relatives. Tazip4-B2 mutant
lines may be more stable over multiple generations, as
multivalents causing accumulation of chromosome
translocations are less frequent. Exploitation of such
Tazip4-B2 mutants, rather than mutants with whole
Ph1 locus deletions, may therefore improve introgression
of wild relative chromosome segments into wheat
