Abstract

BackgroundEpidermal wax covers the surfaces of terrestrial plants to resist biotic and abiotic stresses. Wax-less flowering Chinese cabbage (Brassica campestris L. ssp. chinesis var. utilis tsen et lee) has the charateristics of lustrous green leaves and flower stalks, which are of high commercial value.ResultsTo clarify the mechanism of the wax deficiency, the wax-less flowering Chinese cabbage doubled-haploid (DH) line ‘CX001’ and Chinese cabbage DH line ‘FT’, obtained from isolated microspore culture, were used in the experiments. Genetic analysis showed that the wax-less phenotype of ‘CX001’ was controlled by a recessive nuclear gene, named wlm1 (wax-less mutation 1), which was fine-mapped on chromosome A09 by bulked segregant analysis sequencing (BSA-seq) of B.rapa genome V3.0. There was only one gene (BraA09g066480.3C) present in the mapping region. The homologous gene in Arabidopsis thaliana is AT1G02205 (CER1) that encodes an aldehyde decarboxylase in the epidermal wax metabolism pathway. Semi-quantitative reverse transcription PCR and transcriptome analysis indicated that BraA09g066480.3C was expressed in ‘FT’ but not in ‘CX001’. BraA09g066480.3C was lost in the CXA genome to which ‘CX001’ belonged.ConclusionThe work presented herein demonstrated that BraA09g066480.3C was the causal gene for wax-less flowering Chinese cabbage ‘CX001’. This study will lay a foundation for further research on the molecular mechanism of epidermal wax synthesis in flowering Chinese cabbage.

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