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| United States Patent Application |
20050172360
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Nagel, Bruce
|
August 4, 2005
|
Corn products and methods for their production
Abstract
Disclosed herein is a subgroup of corn lines comprised of plants that
produce seeds having low saturated fatty acid content. The plants
disclosed herein can be used to produce low saturated corn material
predictably, via conventional methods. Further, the plants disclosed
herein can be used to produce commercially acceptable hybrids having
lower saturated fat content.
| Inventors: |
Nagel, Bruce; (Beaver Dam, WI)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
DOW AGROSCIENCES LLC
9330 ZIONSVILLE RD
INDIANAPOLIS
IN
46268
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
068035 |
| Series Code:
|
11
|
| Filed:
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February 28, 2005 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
800/281; 800/320.1 |
| Class at Publication: |
800/281; 800/320.1 |
| International Class: |
A01H 001/00; C12N 015/82; A01H 005/00 |
Claims
1. An assemblage of corn seeds having a mean saturate content of less than
about 7.0% by weight relative to the total fatty acid content of said
seed.
2. The assemblage of corn seeds according to claim 1, wherein said mean
saturate content is less than about 6.7% by weight.
3. The assemblage of corn seeds according to claim 1, wherein said mean
saturate content is less than about 6.0% by weight.
4. The assemblage of corn seeds according to claim 1, said seeds being
obtained from a plant or plants belonging to a corn line selected from
the group consisting of LS0417, LS1498, LS288, or sublines produced
therefrom.
5. The assemblage of corn seeds according to claim 4, wherein said seeds
are obtained from a plant or plants belonging to the LS 1498 corn line,
or sublines produced therefrom.
6. A corn plant that produces seeds having a mean saturate content of less
than about 7.0% by weight relative to the total fatty acid content of
said seeds.
7. The corn plant according to claim 6, wherein said plant displays a waxy
phenotype.
8. The corn plant according to claim 6, wherein said plant is a hybrid.
9. The corn plant according to claim 8, wherein said hybrid displays a
waxy phenotype.
10. The corn plant according to claim 6, wherein said corn plant belongs
to a corn line selected from the group consisting of LS1498, LS288, and
LS0417, or sublines produced therefrom.
11. The corn plant according to claim 10, wherein said corn plant belongs
to the LS1498 corn line.
12. A commercially acceptable hybrid corn plant that produces seeds having
a mean saturate content of less than about 7.0% by weight relative to the
total fatty acid content of said seed, said seeds being the product of a
cross between (a) a first parent from a corn line that is true breeding
for saturate content; and (b) a second parent from a second corn line.
13. A corn oil produced from the assemblage of seeds of claim 1, said oil
having a mean saturate content of less than about 7.0% by weight relative
to the total fatty acid content of said oil.
14. The corn oil according to claim 13, wherein the mean saturate content
is less than about 6.7%.
15. The corn oil according to claim 14, wherein the mean saturate content
is less than about 6.0%.
16. A method for producing low saturate corn material, comprising the
steps of: (a) obtaining a plurality of corn seeds having a mean saturate
content of less than about 7.0%; (b) growing out said plurality of corn
seeds to obtain a population of corn plants; (c) intermating plants
comprising said population to produce first seeds; (d) subjecting said
first seeds to selection based on saturate content, such that a
predetermined saturate percentage of said first seeds is retained and
plants grown from said predetermined percentage of seeds are intermated
to produce second seeds; (e) with said second seeds obtained, repeating
steps (b), (c), and (d) at least once, whereby plants producing seeds
that have a mean saturate content of less than about 7.0% by weight are
obtained.
17. A method for producing corn oil having a saturate content of less than
about 7.0% comprising the steps of: obtaining an assemblage of seeds
having a mean saturate content of less than about 7.0%; and extracting
the oil from said seeds to yield corn oil having a saturate of less then
about 7.0%.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] In recent decades, it has become increasingly clear that diets
containing large amounts of saturated fatty acids are directly correlated
to an increased likelihood of developing heart disease. Hence, efforts
have been made to modify the fatty acid content of commonly used oils to
produce healthier oils having lower amounts of saturated fatty acids.
[0002] Corn oil is composed of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids with
carbon chain lengths ranging from 12 to 24. Approximately 95% or more of
the total oil content is composed of palmitic (16:0), stearic (18:0),
oleic (18:1), and linoleic (18:2) acids, Jellum (1970) J. Agric. Food
Chem., 18:365-70. Palmitic and stearic acids are saturated fatty acids;
thus, corn oil having less of these two fatty acids would be highly
desirable.
[0003] The published literature on saturated fatty acid content in corn
indicates the presence of diverse genes, located on different
chromosomes, that affect saturated fatty acid content in a manner not
clearly understood. This fact, combined with the virtual absence of
information regarding the molecular biology of fatty acid profile in
corn, has complicated the task of modifying the saturate level in corn
and, in particular, has rendered the breeding endeavor of selecting for
corn saturate content highly unpredictable a priori. Moreover, there has
been no basis to date for a reasonable expectation of success in
obtaining mean saturate levels less than 8%.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0004] In general, the present invention relates to corn material having a
saturated fatty acid (saturate) content less than the lowest values
previously reported, and to a corn oil having a percentage of saturates
that provides for a more desirable and healthier oil.
[0005] More specifically, the present invention relates to corn seeds
which have a saturate content of less than about 7.0% by weight relative
to the total fatty acid content of the seed (hereinafter expressed as
percent by weight, or simply percent). In the most preferred embodiment,
the seed has a saturate content of less than about 6.0%. The invention
further relates to a corn plant which produces seeds having a mean
saturate content of less than about 7.0% by weight. Yet another aspect of
the present invention is directed to a corn oil having a saturate content
less than about 7.0%.
[0006] Other features and advantages of the present invention will become
apparent from the following detailed description. It should be
understood, however, that the detailed description and the specific
examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are
given by way of illustration only, since various changes and
modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become
apparent to those skilled in the art from this detailed description.
Unless indicated otherwise, respective contents of the documents cited
are hereby incorporated by reference.
[0007] Percentages and ratios given herein are by weight, and temperatures
are in degrees Celsius unless otherwise indicated. The references cited
within this application are herein incorporated by reference to the
extent applicable. Where necessary to better exemplify the invention,
percentages and ratios may be cross-combined.
DETAILED DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
[0008] In order to provide an understanding of a number of terms used in
the specification and claims herein, the following definitions are
provided.
[0009] "Selection"--Occurs when plants with desired phenotypes or
genotypes are chosen for additional plant breeding procedures and
breeding projects.
[0010] "Intermating"--Denotes the practice of planting seeds of selected
plant phenotypes in individual rows, such that normal germination,
emergence and plant maturation occur, and (at the onset of pollen-shed
and silk extrusion) systematically crossing plants from each of these
rows to plants from as many other rows as possible, thereby to maximize
the number of crosses between unrelated individuals in the population.
[0011] "Backcrossing"--as used herein refers to the crossing of a progeny
plant or line with its parent plant or line.
[0012] "Variety"--Refers to a group of plants within a species, such as
Zea mays L., which share certain constant characters that separate them
from other possible varieties within that species. While possessing at
least one distinctive trait, a variety can also be characterized by a
substantial amount of variation between individuals within the variety,
based primarily on the Mendelian segregation of traits among the progeny
of succeeding generations.
[0013] "Line"--a line as distinguished from "variety" and "cultivar"
refers to a group of plants which are substantially uniform in their
traits except that there is relatively minor variation within the group
and such variation can be characterized. The decreased variation within
this group has generally (although not exclusively) resulted from several
generations of self-pollination (selfing).
[0014] "True Breeding"--A line is considered "true breeding" for a
particular trait if it is genetically homozygous for that trait to the
extent that when the variety is self-pollinated, no significant amount of
independent segregation of the trait among progeny is observed.
[0015] "Saturate Content" and "Saturates"--These terms are used
synonymously and interchangeably with relation to measurements of the
proportion of saturates to total fatty acids present in corn oil which is
extracted from single seeds (using the whole- or half-seed technique, as
described below) or from bulked seed. Since the saturate values set out
in this description are generally obtained from GLC analyses, the
reported proportions of saturate are essentially by weight. When saturate
content or saturate value are expressed as a percent or a percent by
weight, it is to be understood that such percentage is relative to the
total fatty acid content of the seed(s).
[0016] "Bulked Seed"--can be constituted, for example, from a plurality of
seeds of a single cob (a kernel bulk"), from the combined seed from all
or a particular part of a genetically related family of plants, or from
the seed of a plant introduction (defined below).
[0017] A "Plant Introduction" (P. I.)--is a sample of seeds of a given
species (e.g., Zea mays L.) that can be grown into plants having a common
discernible (gross) morphology. Generally designated by country of
origin, a P. I. often represents germplasm native and/or adapted to that
country, and hence may embody considerable genetic variability. A P. I.
can also represent the germplasm of an inbred line.
[0018] The following examples are provided to further illustrate the
present invention and are not intended to limit the invention beyond the
limitations set forth in the appended claims.
EXAMPLE 1
Determination of Fatty Acid Content
[0019] The screening can be effected, for example, by a half-seed
technique, in which the seed scutulum is excised and the oil extracted is
assayed by GLC, see Jellum & Worthington (1966) Crop Sci. 6:251-253, or
by similarly analyzing oil extracted from a whole seed. The latter
approach does not save the embryo for germination. GLC analysis can be
conducted on a five- (or more) kernel bulk sample and on a one-half
kernel sample, which allows the planting of the remaining half-seed for
further breeding. The screening can be performed before an initial
selfing step or, if a greater degree of segregation is desired, after a
self-pollination of plants grown from the bulk seed.
[0020] The fatty acid composition of corn seeds developed in the breeding
program was determined by GLC in accordance with the procedures described
below.
[0021] The oil was obtained by using a corn oil extraction protocol having
the following steps:
[0022] 1. A sample of corn kernels were removed from the ear and was then
catalogued according to row number and pedigree.
[0023] 2. A sample was crushed with a pestle in a mortar. Ether was added
and the sample was crushed further for ten seconds.
[0024] 3. This solution was then drawn up through non-absorbing cotton
into a pipette. The clean solution was then put into a test tube.
[0025] 4. Three drops of tetramethylammonium hydroxide or sodium methoxide
were added to the solution in the test tube and allowed to react for five
minutes.
[0026] 5. After five minutes, distilled water was added to the solution to
raise the liquid level in the test tube. Since oil is lighter than water,
the oil was easily siphoned off the top layer.
[0027] 6. The oil drawn off was placed in 2 ml vials. Ether was added to
raise the level to three-fourths full.
[0028] 7. The vial was then capped and thus ready to be processed through
the gas liquid chromatograph.
[0029] For analyses of one-half seed samples, a small piece of the
scutellum was removed with a razor blade. A sample of scutellar tissue
was then placed in a mortar with a small amount of ether, approximately 1
to 1.5 ml. The sample was crushed and stirred for approximately 10
seconds with a pestle, and the solution drawn up through non-absorbent
cotton and placed in a test tube. A 0.5 ml sample of the ether extractant
was then treated in the manner described above. The fatty acid analysis
of one half-seed allowed planting of the remaining half-kernel in a
breeding nursery and conducting of additional research and development
with this genotype.
[0030] The GLC analyses were accomplished using a 5890A Hewlett-Packard
gas liquid chromatograph equipped with a flame ionization detector and a
Hewlett-Packard 3396A integrator. The column used was a Supelco 2330
fused silica capillary column (having a film thickness of 0.2 micron and
column dimensions of 15 m..times.0.25 mm.). The operating conditions for
the GLC analysis included an injector temperature of 250 degrees Celsius
and a detector temperature of 300 degrees Celsius. Column flow was 2.0
ml/min. of helium. Each chromatographic run was temperature-programmed to
begin at 170 degrees Celsius and remain at that temperature for 1.0 min.
The temperature was then increased to 180 degrees Celsius at a rate of 1
or 2 degrees Celsius/min. After this period of time, the chromatograph
was completed and the column prepared for the next run.
EXAMPLE 2
Production of Mutant Lines
[0031] Two high oleic corn lines from the source population HOLEISYN were
selected to see if low saturate lines could be developed. These two lines
were crossed and the F1 seed was grown and selfed. The F2 seed was
planted, and before pollination, approximately 200 ears were shootbagged.
Tassels that were shedding were selected and the ear shoots were cut back
to ensure good silk exposure. A day later the corn pollen was collected
using tassel bags. The pollen was placed on a small screen to filter out
pollen from anthers and other foreign material. The pollen was then
poured into a solution of 1 ml EMS and 100 mls Fisher parafin oil (stock
diluted by 1 ml and 15 mls oil solution). The solution was mixed every
minute for the first five minutes and then every five minutes for 45
minutes to keep the pollen suspended. After 45 minutes the pollen/parafin
solution was brushed onto the silks of developing ears. A tassel bag was
used to cover the ear to prevent contamination. The ear was picked at
maturity and then tested for fatty acid content using the half-seed GLC
analysis procedures outlined above.
EXAMPLE 3
Mutant Seed Production in Greenhouse
[0032] Resulting seeds from the EMS mutagenesis procedure were screened
for low saturate content. Plants derived from half seeds designated as
lines LS1498-18, LS288-04, and L0417-12 which showed promising levels of
saturates and oleic acid were selfed to produce sufficient seed for these
experiments. As soon as fully mature seed could be harvested from plants
derived from this seed, five kernels from each plant were subjected to
fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis to determine fatty acid profiles.
Saturates levels were then determined and statistical analysis was
performed to identify those sublines (tracing back to individual selfed
plants) which were significantly lower in total saturates. Seeds from
these identified sublines were planted and selfed to produce another
cycle of seed which was then analyzed. Numerous sublines were generated
for each mutant line; however, only a few examples have been presented in
Table 1. Results of sublines showed total saturates were always below the
levels found in elite germplasm, i.e., OQ414. The lowering of saturates
in the mutant germplasm was accomplished by up to a 50% reduction in 16:0
levels (palmitic acid), rather than 18:0 levels (stearic acid) when
compared back to levels found in conventional germplasm. Presence of high
18:1 levels in the mutants was observed and consistent with earlier
efforts to breed for high oleic acid in maize. The 18:2 levels (linoleic
acid) were shown to be considerably lower in the mutants compared to
elite germplasm while 18:3 (linolenic acid) and percent lipids of the
seed embryo remained fairly constant.
EXAMPLE 4
Mutant Seed Production in Field
[0033] Greenhouse produced seed from the lines produced in Example 2 was
pooled across several sublines within each mutant line in order to supply
a sufficient number of kernels for planting. Plants were selfed and fatty
acid content was analyzed. About a 15% further reduction in saturates was
observed from field produced seed compared to kernels from the
greenhouse. Greenhouse produced seed had total saturate levels between
7.7% and 8.8%, whereas the field produced seed had saturate levels below
7% (Table 2). These results seemed to be consistent with observations of
Canola seed which showed 1-2% reduction in saturates for field compared
to greenhouse grown seed.
1TABLE 1
Percent fatty acid profiles for three
mutant lines
and sublines derived therefrom
Total
Lipids of
Saturates 16:0 18:0 18:1 18:2 18:3 seed embryo
Mutant Line (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%)
LS1498-18.sup.1
5.6 4.4 1.2
LS1498-18.S01 7.3.sup.2 5.8 1.4 64.3 26.1 0.7 25.4
0.2.sup.3 0.1 0.2 2.4 2.4 0.1 10.3
LS1498-18.S01.S08
6.7.sup.2 5.5 1.2 64.9 26.4 0.8 26.7
0.1.sup.3 0.2 0.1 0.8 0.7
0.1 0.6
LS288-04.sup.1 7.4 5.4 2.0
LS288-04.S09 7.5.sup.2
5.2 2.3 65.1 25.8 0.5 27.9
0.2.sup.3 0.1 0.2 1.2 1.2 0.0 5.9
LS288-04.S09.S06.S02 6.9.sup.2 4.9 2.0 71.1 19.9 0.7 34.8
0.2.sup.3 0.2 0.1 1.3 1.3 0.1 4.5
LS0417-12.sup.1 6.8 5.0 1.8
LS0417-12.S07 9.0.sup.2 6.8 2.2 68.2 20.5 0.8 26.7
0.3.sup.3
0.3 0.1 1.3 1.1 0.1 5.4
LS0417-12.S07.S08 7.6.sup.2 5.8 1.8 72.4
18.1 0.7 27.7
0.1.sup.3 0.1 0.1 1.7 1.7 0.0 1.8
OQ414
12.0.sup.2 10.8 1.2 23.4 62.7 1.1 28.2
0.5.sup.3 0.6 0.1 1.4 0.9
0.1 4.2
.sup.1Original mutant line
.sup.2Average
of five kernels
.sup.3Standard deviation
[0034]
2TABLE 2
Fatty acid composition of greenhouse and
field produced mutant seed
Lipids
Total of
seed
Saturates 16:0 18:0 18:1 18:2 18:3 embryo
Mutant Line
(%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%)
LS1498-18 7.7.sup.2 5.8 1.9
70.8 20.1 0.6
(Greenhouse).sup.1 0.4.sup.3 0.2 0.2 1.8 2.1 0.0
LS1498-18 6.3.sup.4 4.9 1.4 64.9 27.4 0.6 33.1
(Field)
0.3.sup.5 0.1 0.3 0.8 0.8 0.0 2.5
LS288-04 8.0.sup.2 5.3 2.7 67.0
23.6 0.5
(Greenhouse) 0.1.sup.3 0.1 0.1 0.5 0.4 0.0
LS288-04 6.4.sup.4 4.3 2.1 69.6 22.7 0.5 35.8
(Field) 0.3.sup.5
0.2 0.4 1.2 1.3 0.1 6.3
LS0417-12 8.8.sup.2 6.8 2.0 67.5 22.0 0.6
(Greenhouse) 0.1.sup.3 0.2 0.2 2.3 2.2 0.1
LS0417-12
6.7.sup.4 5.5 1.2 66.0 25.8 0.7 36.6
(Field) 0.4.sup.5 0.4 0.1 3.1
2.8 0.1 7.2
.sup.1Seed pooled from several sublines
.sup.2Average of means
.sup.3Standard error
.sup.4Average of five kernels
.sup.5Standard deviation
[0035] Seeds of the lines disclosed herein are deposited with the American
Type Culture Collection, 12301 Parklawn Drive, Rockville, Md. 20852 USA,
in accord with the provisions of the Budapest Treaty. Cultures were
assigned the following accession numbers by the repository: LS1498, ATCC
No. ______; LS288, ATCC No. ______; LS0417, ATCC No.______.
EXAMPLE 5
Production of Commercially-acceptable Hybrids and Hybrids Having Waxy Type
Kernel
[0036] Elite low saturate corn lines can be developed by crossing the low
saturate line (derived from a low saturate P. I. population) with an
agronomically elite line for a given maturity region. For example, CS405
is an elite corn inbred line which has a saturate content of about 11.4%.
LS288-04-506-502 is the designation for a low saturate line developed by
the procedures of this invention. By crossing CS405 with
LS288-04-506-502, followed with two to four generations of selfing and
selection of low saturate lines with agronomically desirable traits, the
lines resulting from this breeding effort can exhibit low saturate
content along with acceptable agronomic traits such as plant vigor, good
stalks and roots, disease resistance, and the like. Crossing low saturate
lines with a number of elite lines and selfing and selecting from these
crosses can produce numerous new low saturate corn lines. These lines can
be adapted to any maturity region desired by selecting the appropriate
maturity level in the elite corn parent and selecting for the desired
maturity in subsequent selfing generations. The low saturate lines
developed by the present invention can be used as one or more parents in
corn hybrids.
[0037] Also, one or more backcrosses to the elite recurrent parent can be
accomplished to incorporate a higher percentage of the elite germplasm
characteristics while retaining the low saturate trait.
[0038] An inbred line that is true-breeding for a low saturate phenotype
according to the present invention is advantageously employed in a
backcrossing program to introgress the low saturate trait into other,
more agronomically desirable lines. For example, a true-breeding inbred
line of the present invention can be the donor parent for backcrossing to
a waxy corn line, to thereby produce a high oleic, low saturate, waxy
hybrid or line. In this regard, a "hybrid" would be an offspring obtained
by crossing parent plants of different lineage.
[0039] As disclosed, for example, by Coe et al., in Corn and Corn
Improvement (3d ed.), Sprague, G. F. and Dudley, J. W., Eds., p. 142-143
(American Society of Agronomy, Madison, Wis., 1988) (hereinafter "Coe et
al. (1988)"), the waxy type of kernel is so unique and its expression so
unconfounded that the waxy trait is conventionally used as a universal
marker. The waxy endosperm chips away evenly when cut with a blade,
leaving a smooth, opaque surface, while normal endosperm breaks unevenly
and leaves an irregular, translucent surface. In addition, the starch in
the outer surface of a non-waxy endosperm stains blue, turning quickly to
black, with an iodine (I.sub.2)-
potassium iodide (KI) solution, while
that of material homozygous for the waxy allele (wx1) stains reddish
brown, turning soon to dark brown.
[0040] The uniqueness of the waxy trait allows for the ready backcrossing
to a recurrent waxy parent of progeny that are (low saturate x waxy)
hybrids, according to the present invention, against a donor waxy
(wx1/wx1) parent. That is, progress can be readily monitored for a
backcrossing generation whereby the germplasm contribution of the low
saturate donor, save for the expression of a mean saturate value of about
7% or less, is virtually eliminated.
[0041] Introgression of a low saturate phenotype as described above can
also be accomplished with regard to genetic backgrounds characterized by
traits other than waxy. Illustrative of traits that could be combined
with a low saturate phenotype, pursuant to the present invention, are
those listed in Table 3.
3TABLE 3
EXEMPLARY CORN TRAITS TO COMBINE WITH LOW
SATURATE PHENOTYPE
Deter-
minant* Description
Insect Resistance
Bt the expression of Bt genes,
synthetic or native, can impart
insect resistance to a wide array
of insects. See e.g., U.S.
Pat. No. 5,380,831 whose teachings are
incorporated
herein in their entirety.
Endosperm Mutants
ael.sup.S "amylose extender": amylose fraction of starch increased
to 50% (glassy, tarnished endosperm); ael gene plus
modifiers provides a range in amylose from about 50% to
80%, but
the amylose content can be stabilized at
intermediate levels;
Vineyard & Bear (1952) Corn Genet.
Coop. Newsltr. 26:5
o2.sup.S "opaque-2 endosperm": reduced zein and increased lysine
in endosperm (soft, chalky, non-transparent kernels; little,
hard, vitreous or horny endosperm); Nelson et al. (1965)
Science
150: 1469-70
Resistance to Common Leaf Rust
(Puccinia
sorghi):
Rp1 Mains (1926) J. Hered, 17: 313-25; (1930) J. Agric.
Res.
43: 419-30
Rp3.sup.S Wilkinson & Hooker (1968)
Phytopathol. 58: 605-08
Rp4.sup.S Wilkinson & Hooker (1968) loc.
cit.
Rp5.sup.S Saxena & Hooker (1968) Proc. Nat'l Acad. Sci. USA
61: 1300-05
Rpp9.sup.S resistance to southern leaf rust
(Puccinia polysora
Underw.); Ullstrup (1965) Phytopathol. 55:
425-28
Resistance to Northern Leaf Spot
(Cochliobolus
carbonum Nelson):
Hm1 confers full resistance, although some
alleles are
intermediate; Nelson & Ullstrup (1964) J. Hered. 55:
194-99,
Hamid et al. (1982) Phytopathol. 72: 1169-73
Hm2
confers resistance, in the presence of homozygous
recessive hm1,
that is lower initially but becomes
progressively stronger as the
plant develops. Nelson &
Ullstrup (1964) J. Heredity 55: 194-99,
Hamid et al.
(1982) Phytopathol. 752: 1169-73
Resistance
to Southern Corn Leaf Blight
(Bipolaris maydis) (Nisik.) Shoemaker
(race 0):
rhm1.sup.S Smith & Hooker (1973) Crop Sci. 13: 330-31
Resistance to Northern Leaf Blight
(Helminthosporium turcicum
Pass.):
Ht1.sup.S Hooker (1963) Crop Sci. 3: 381-83
Ht2.sup.S Hooker (1977) loc. cit. 17: 132-35
Ht3.sup.S Hooker
(1981) Corn Genet. Coop. Newsltr. 55: 87-88
Bx1 resistance to H.
turcicum (reduces levels of H. turcicum
infection in genotypes
ht1/ht1 Bx1/Bx1 and
Ht1/Ht1/Bx1/Bx1, relative to bx1/bx1
counterparts);
Couture et al. (1971) Phys. Plant Pathol. 1:
515-21
Aphid, Corn. Mosaic, Virus I, Eradicane .TM.
Herbicide, Drought, Heat & Aluminum Tolerance
aph1 resistance to
corn leaf aphid (Rhopalosiphum maidis
Fitch.); Change & Brewbaker
(1976) Corn Genet. Coop.
Newsltr. 50: 31-32
Mv1 resistance
to corn mosaic virus I; Brewbaker (1974) in
Proc. 29th Ann. Corn
& Sorghum Res. Conf. 118-33
thc1 tolerance to Eradicane .TM.
(S-ethyl-dipropylthiocarbamate
plus R25788 safener); Pfund & Crum
(1977) Agronomy
Abstr., p. 66
lte1 Miranda (1981) Corn
Genet. Coop. Newsltr 55: 18-19
(also conditions frost resistance)
Lte2 Miranda (1982) loc. cit. 56: 28-30
Conditions pollen
competition, disfavoring fertilization of silks
with same genotype
by pollen of another (Ga1-S pollen
outcompetes ga1 pollen for
Ga1-S silks); maintains isolation
of strains from outcrossing
Ga1-S.sup.S D. Schwartz (1950) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 36: 719-724
GA8 Schwartz (1951) Corn Genet. Coop. Newsltr 25: 30
*Designation of determinations conforms to usage in linkage map of Coe et
al. (1988). A superscript "S" indicates availability from the Corn
Genetic Stock Center, Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois
(Urbana).
EXAMPLE 6
Imparting Male Sterility to Selected Lines
[0042] In addition, various approaches to imparting male sterility in corn
can be used to produce male-sterile, low saturate material within the
present invention, which material can be employed in turn to produce
hybrids which also display a low saturate phenotype according to the
present invention. An inbred line possessing such a low saturate
phenotype can thus be advantageously employed in a backcrossing program
as a recurrent parent to cytoplasmic-genetic, male-sterile donors
containing both nuclear and cytoplasmic factors imparting male sterility
(A lines), to donors containing nuclear but not cytoplasmic factors
imparting male sterility (B lines), and to donors containing nuclear and
cytoplasmic factors that restore fertility to male-sterile material (R
lines), as described, for example, by Coe et al. (1988), at pages 195-98
and pages 206-09, and Poehlman, "Breeding Field Crops" (2d ed.), AVI
Publishing Co. (1979), at pages 292-95. Sources for cytoplasmic
male-sterility (cms) and fertility restoration (Rf) factors include
Holden's Foundation Seeds, Inc., P.O. Box 839, Williamsburg, Iowa 52361
(cms-S and cms-C); Illinois Foundation Seeds, Inc., P.O. Box 722,
Champaign, Ill. 61820 (cms-S and cms-C); and Agronomy Department,
University of Illinois, Urbana, Ill. (cms-T, cms-S, cms-C and various Rf
determinations).
[0043] It should be understood that the examples and embodiments described
herein are for illustrative purposes only and that various modifications
or changes in light thereof will be suggested to persons skilled in the
art and are to be included within the spirit and purview of this
application and the scope of the appended claims.
* * * * *