Litcius/Paper detail

Cryptic cytoplasmic male sterility‐causing gene in the mitochondrial genome of common <i>japonica</i> rice

Kinya Toriyama, Yuko Iwai, Shinya Takeda, Ayumu Takatsuka, Keisuke Igarashi, Tomoyuki Furuta, Sunlu Chen, Yoshitaka Kanaoka, Yuji Kishima, Shin‐ichi Arimura, Tomohiko Kazama

2024The Plant Journal13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) is an agronomically significant trait that causes dysfunction in pollen and anther development. It is often observed during successive backcrossing between distantly related species. Here, we show that Asian japonica cultivars (Oryza sativa) exhibit CMS when the nucleus is replaced with that of the African rice Oryza glaberrima. The CMS line produced stunted anthers and did not set any seeds. Mitochondrial orf288 RNA was detected in the anthers of CMS lines but not in fertility restorer lines. The mitochondrial genome-edited japonica rice that was depleted of orf288 did not exhibit male sterility when backcrossed with O. glaberrima. These results demonstrate that orf288 is a CMS-causing gene. As orf288 commonly occurs in the mitochondrial genomes of japonica rice, these results indicate that common japonica rice cultivars possess a cryptic CMS-causing gene hidden in their mitochondrial genomes.

Topics & Concepts

Cytoplasmic male sterilityBiologyJaponicaMitochondrial DNAOryza sativaStamenSterilityBackcrossingGenomeGeneticsGenePollenNuclear geneBotanyPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsPlant Reproductive BiologyGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies