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- RAPD analysis of herbicide-resistant
- Brasilian rice lines produced via mutagenesis
- S.S. Sandhu1, Cândido R. Bastos2, Luiz Ernesto Azini2,
- Augusto Tulmann Neto3 and Carlos Colombo4
- 1Department of Biological Sciences, R.D. University, Jabalpur, India
- 2Centro de Graníferas, Instituto Agronômico, Campinas, SP, Brasil
- 3Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura (CENA), Universidade de São Paulo,
- Caixa Postal 96, 13400-970 São Paulo, SP, Brasil
- 4Centro de Genética, Biologia Molecular e Fitoquímica, Instituto Agronômico,
- Caixa Postal 28, 13001-970 Campinas, SP, Brasil
- Corresponding author: C. Colombo
- E-mail: ccolombo@iac.br
- Genet. Mol. Res. 1 (4): 359-370 (2002)
- Received October 30, 2002
- Published December 30, 2002
ABSTRACT. Over the last two decades, mutational techniques have become one of the most important tools available to progressive rice- breeding programs. In a mutation-breeding program initiated in 1999 at the Instituto Agronômico of Campinas, SP, Brazil, a rice line, IAC103, was selected for mutational studies with gamma radiation and ethyl methyl sulfonate mutagenesis, with the aim of developing a herbicide-resistant crop. After mutagenesis, surviving plants were exposed to glufosinate to check for herbicide resistance, which was examined up to the second generation. A detailed RAPD analysis was made of the resistant plants. Eighty Operon technology primers were tested and 10 were selected for a detailed study of RAPD markers that could tag herbicide resistance genes. Resistant and susceptible lines produced variation in the RAPD patterns and certain bands were found only in certain lines. These results suggest genetic ligation that will be confirmed through a genetic segregation study.
Key words: Rice, Mutagenesis, Gamma radiation, Glufosinate, Ethyl methyl sulfonate, EMS, Segregation, Herbicide resistance
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