Abstract

Interspecific reciprocal crosses between three cultivated Brassica allotetraploids and one wild species Brassica fruticulosa (FF, 2n =16) were made and the trigenomic hybrids were produced only with embryo rescue. From the crosses with Brassica juncea (AABB, 2n = 36) and Brassica napus (AACC, 2n = 38), hybrids (F.AB, 2n = 26; F.AC, 2n = 27) were obtained only with B. fruticulosa as female, but the reciprocal crosses with Brassica carinata (BBCC, 2n = 34) gave rise to hybrids (F.BC/BC.F, 2n = 25). These hybrids showed an intermediate morphology and were sterile for male and female except those with B. carinata . All the triploids showed high frequency of bivalents during diakinesis and metaphase I (MI) of meiosis. The allohexaploids (FF.AABB, 2n = 52; FF.AACC, 2n = 54; BBCC.FF, 2n = 50) were synthesized by colchicine treatments of respective hybrids in vitro , which showed growth vigor and had larger stature than the hybrids, but were male sterile except one (FF.AABB). They produced progenies with the expected chromosome complements (F.AABB, 2n = 44; F.AACC, 2n = 46; BBCC.F, 2n = 42) after pollination by respective Brassica allotetraploids . In these allohexaploids, chromosomes were mainly paired as bivalents at diakinesis and segregated equally at anaphase I (AI) during meiosis of pollen mother cells (PMCs). These allohexaploids and progenies were valuable for the breeding of Brassica crops. Key words : Brassica allotetraploids, Brassica fruticulosa, interspecific hybrids, crossability, morphology, genomic affinity.

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