Abstract

Polymorphisms at the Waxy locus of Amaranthus caudatus L. collected from a wide range of regions were used to investigate genetic diversity and mutation sites. A comparison of the Waxy locus revealed a very high level of sequence conservation. This result clearly showed low environmental and evolutionary variability in the Waxy gene. We also performed screening to confirm the mutation sites in the coding sequences of all accessions. The results indicate that one insertion in the coding region of Waxy genes was responsible for the change in perisperm starch leading to the waxy phenotype in all accessions of this species, and thus that a single mutation event altered the regulation of the Waxy gene during the domestication of this crop. In addition, phylogenetic analysis showed that waxy phenotypes within each of three species, A. caudatus, A. cruentus and A. hypochondriacus, originated separately or differentiated from nonwaxy phenotypes of each species through a single mutational event (i.e., a frame shift or base substitution). We also compared obvious structural features of the coding sequence of waxy and nonwaxy phenotypes with those of low-amylose phenotypes in A. caudatus. The Waxy coding sequences of low-amylose phenotypes do not show polymorphisms and are identical with those of waxy phenotypes. This could mean that there is another gene that encodes a key enzyme responsible for amylose synthesis as the elementary quantity in tissues other than perisperm in A. caudatus.

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