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Research Article

Identification of a novel haplotype of the Ms locus controlling restoration of male-fertility and its implication in origination of cytoplasmic male-sterility in onion (Allium cepa L.)

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Pages 750-758 | Accepted 30 Apr 2021, Published online: 13 May 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Seeds of F1 hybrid cultivars of onions have been exclusively produced by utilising cytoplasmic male-sterility (CMS). A single locus, Ms, controls restoration of male-fertility of CMS onions. When a molecular marker tagging the AcPMS1 gene, a candidate gene for the Ms locus, was used to genotype diverse breeding lines, an unusual marker genotype showing an intermediate size of PCR product was identified in one breeding line (ORI854). The male-fertility phenotype of ORI854 was all male-sterile. Full-length genomic DNA sequence (16,464 bp) of this novel AcPMS1 allele from ORI854 was more closely related to a recessive AcPMS1 allele than to a dominant allele. However, there were more than 200 polymorphic sequences between this novel allele and the recessive allele, indicating that this novel AcPMS1 allele might not have recently diverged from the recessive allele. Phylogenetic analysis implied that onion male-sterility might have first appeared in a common ancestor before divergence of this novel allele and recessive allele of AcPMS1. Analysis of full-length cDNA sequences of additional 12 genes showing almost perfect linkage disequilibrium with the Ms locus indicated that no recombination might have happened among 13 genes including AcPMS1 in the novel Ms haplotype after divergence from the recessive Ms haplotype.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Ji-wha Hur, Jeong-Ahn Yoo and Su-jung Kim for their dedicated technical assistance.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Supplementary material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by the Korea Institute of Planning and Evaluation for Technology in Food, Agriculture and Forestry (IPET) through Golden Seed Project [Center for Horticultural Seed Development, No 213007-05-5-SBB10].

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