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1.
Theor Appl Genet ; 109(3): 562-70, 2004 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15221141

RESUMO

A field trial of 15 transgenic birch lines expressing a sugar beet chitinase IV gene and the corresponding controls was established in southern Finland to study the effects of the level of sugar beet chitinase IV expression on birch resistance to fungal diseases. The symptoms caused by natural infections of two fungal pathogens, Pyrenopeziza betulicola (leaf spot disease) and Melampsoridium betulinum (birch rust), were analysed in the field during a period of 3 years. The lines that had shown a high level of sugar beet chitinase IV mRNA accumulation in the greenhouse also showed high sugar beet chitinase IV expression after 3 years in the field. The level of sugar beet chitinase IV expression did not significantly improve the resistance of transgenic birches to leaf spot disease. Instead, some transgenic lines were significantly more susceptible to leaf spot than the controls. The level of sugar beet chitinase IV expression did have an improving effect on most parameters of birch rust; the groups of lines showing high or intermediate transgene expression were more resistant to birch rust than those showing low expression. This result indicates that the tested transformation may provide a tool for increasing the resistance of silver birch to birch rust.


Assuntos
Betula/fisiologia , Quitinases/metabolismo , Fungos , Doenças das Plantas/genética , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Análise de Variância , Beta vulgaris/genética , Betula/genética , Betula/microbiologia , Northern Blotting , Quitinases/genética , Finlândia , Estudos Longitudinais , Fenótipo , Doenças das Plantas/microbiologia , Plantas Geneticamente Modificadas
2.
Theor Appl Genet ; 105(2-3): 465-473, 2002 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12582552

RESUMO

This study describes genotype-environment interactions in pollen competitive ability expressed as pollen-tube growth rate and seed-siring success in Betula pendula Roth. A factorial crossing design was applied using the same maternal and paternal clones in two different environmental conditions, in a B. pendula seed orchard established in a greenhouse and at an outdoor clone collection. Both single donor and two-donor pollinations were employed. Female inflorescences were collected after a fixed time of germination, pollen-tube lengths were measured for each cross, and paternity of the seeds sired by two-donor pollen mixtures was analyzed using isozyme markers. The pollination site had a significant influence on pollen-tube growth rate and seed-siring success. Significant interactions between pollination site and pollen donor indicated genotype-environment interactions in pollen-tube growth rate and seed-siring success. A highly significant positive correlation between pollen-tube growth rate and seed-siring success was found in the greenhouse but not at the outdoor clone collection. These results suggest that the pollen-tube growth rate can be a predictor of seed-siring success in controlled greenhouse conditions, where differences among maternal plants are mainly of genetic origin, but not in more heterogeneous outdoor conditions. In natural birch stands, environmental maternal effects probably diminish the significance of pollen competition for sexual selection in Betula pendula. At seed orchards, the effects of environmental conditions on pollen competitive ability can have important consequences for the genetic composition of the seed crop.

3.
Am J Bot ; 88(5): 854-60, 2001 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11353710

RESUMO

The relationship between pollen and progeny performance has been a subject of many studies but the evidence for pollen-tube growth rate as an indicator of progeny fitness is equivocal. We used an anemophilous tree, Betula pendula, to examine the relationship between pollen-tube growth rate and seed and seedling performance. We crossed nine maternal plants with pollen from six pollen donors in a clonal B. pendula seed orchard, measured the pollen-tube growth rates for every cross, and analyzed the performance of the resulting seeds and seedlings. The only significant positive correlation was found between pollen-tube growth rate and seed mass when we controlled for seed number per inflorescence. Using seed mass as a covariate, we found that only maternal parent had a significant effect on the number of seeds per inflorescence, the percentage of germinable and embryonic seeds, and early seedling growth. Both maternal and paternal parents had significant effects on seedling height after 85 d of growth. These results are in concordance with the general view that maternal effects are usually most apparent in seed characters and during early plant growth. This study does not provide strong evidence for the theory of pollen-tube growth rate as an indicator of progeny quality.

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