Abstract

In a previously made cross Brassica napus cv. Oro (2n = 38) × Capsella bursa-pastoris (2n = 4x = 32), one F1 hybrid with 2n = 38 was totally male sterile. The hybrid contained no complete chromosomes from C. bursa-pastoris, but some specific AFLP (amplified fragment length polymorphism) bands of C. bursa-pastoris were detected. The hybrid was morphologically quite similar to ‘Oro’ except for smaller flowers with rudimentary stamens but normal pistils, and showed good seed-set after pollination by ‘Oro’ and other B. napus cultivars. The fertility segregation ratios (3:1, 1:1) in its progenies indicated that the male sterility was controlled by a single recessive gene. In the pollen mother cells of the male sterile hybrid, chromosome pairing and segregation were normal. Histological sectioning of its anthers showed that the tapetum was multiple layers and was hypertrophic from the stage of sporogenic cells, and that the tetrads were compressed by the vacuolated and disaggregated tapetum and no mature pollen grains were formed in anther sacs, thus resulting in male sterility. The possible mechanisms for the production of the male sterile hybrid and its potential in breeding are discussed.

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