Abstract

Key messageThe meiotic recombination gene Dmc1 on wheat chromosome 5D has been identified as a candidate for the maintenance of normal chromosome synapsis and crossover at low and possibly high temperatures.We initially assessed the effects of low temperature on meiotic chromosome synapsis and crossover formation in the hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) variety ‘Chinese Spring’. At low temperatures, asynapsis and chromosome univalence have been observed before in Chinese Spring lines lacking the long arm of chromosome 5D (5DL), which led to the proposal that 5DL carries a gene (Ltp1) that stabilises wheat chromosome pairing at low temperatures. In the current study, Chinese Spring wild type and 5DL interstitial deletion mutant plants were exposed to low temperature in a controlled environment room during a period from premeiotic interphase to early meiosis I. A 5DL deletion mutant was identified whose meiotic chromosomes exhibit extremely high levels of asynapsis and chromosome univalence at metaphase I after 7 days at 13 °C, suggesting that Ltp1 is deleted in this mutant. Immunolocalisation of the meiotic proteins ASY1 and ZYP1 on ltp1 mutants showed that low temperature results in a failure to complete synapsis at pachytene. KASP genotyping revealed that the ltp1 mutant has a 4-Mb deletion in 5DL. Of 41 genes within this deletion region, the strongest candidate for the stabilisation of chromosome pairing at low temperatures is the meiotic recombination gene Dmc1. The ltp1 mutants were subsequently treated at 30 °C for 24 h during meiosis and exhibited a reduced number of crossovers and increased univalence, though to a lesser extent than at 13 °C. We therefore renamed our ltp1 mutant ‘ttmei1’ (temperature-tolerant meiosis 1) to reflect this additional loss of high temperature tolerance.

Highlights

  • In plants, male reproductive development is highly sensitive to adverse environmental conditions including high and low temperatures (De Storme and Geelen 2014)

  • Gene IDs from Ensembl Plants are for T. urartu (TuDMC1): TRIUR3_13472; for Ae. tauschii (AetDMC1-D): AET5Gv20357200; for the T. dicoccoides A copy (TdDMC1-A): TRIDC5AG022500 and for the T. dicoccoides B copy (TdDMC1-B): TRIDC5BG023380

  • Chinese Spring wild-type plants and mutant plants with interstitial deletions within chromosome 5DL were exposed to low temperature (13 °C) for 7 days during a period lasting from premeiotic interphase to early meiosis I

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Summary

Introduction

Male reproductive development is highly sensitive to adverse environmental conditions including high and low temperatures (De Storme and Geelen 2014). In cereal crops such as wheat, where grains are an important yield factor, stress-induced male sterility generally has a negative effect on crop yield and performance (De Storme and Geelen 2014). In the UK and France in the mid-1980s, cold and wet weather during floral development in the wheat variety ‘Moulin’ caused significant sterility, resulting in a reduction in grain yield of more than 70% (Law 1999). The dramatic falls in yield were thought to be a result of reduced fertility caused by the occurrence

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