Abstract
Beta corolliflora is a wild relative of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris) with 2n=4x=36 chromosomes. Monosomic addition lines (2n=19) of B. corolliflora in B. vulgaris were identified from backcross progenies between triploid hybrids (genome constitution VVC) and sugar beet. They were characterized by DNA-fingerprinting using nine different B. corolliflora-specific repetitive sequences as probes and by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using two B. corollifora specific sequences and two rDNA probes. Unique banding patterns obtained after genomic Southern hybridization enabled the classification of monosomic addition lines into 11 clusters, three of which proved to have a wild beet chromosome fragment in addition to the sugar beet chromosomes as revealed by FISH. Repetitive sequences pBC216 and pBC1416 were found to be present only on wild beet chromosomes IV and V. Chromosomes I and IV were found to carry genes for 18S and 5S rRNA, respectively. An idiogram of B. corolliflora was established in the triploid VVC hybrid on the basis of chromosome size and FISH. Eight B. corolliflora addition lines could be unequivocally identified by Southern hybridization and FISH, one addition line carrying the missing wild beet chromosome is probably not viable under greenhouse conditions. The monosomic addition lines will serve as a bridge for transferring genes from wild species to sugar beet and will help to uncover genetic relationships between species of the genus Beta.
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