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| ACCESSION | PLANT NAME | TAXONOMY | ORIGIN | GENEBANK | IMAGE | AVAILABILITY | RECEIVED | SOURCE TYPE | SOURCE DATE | COLLECTION SITE | COORDINATES | ELEVATION | HABITAT | IMPROVEMENT LEVEL | NARRATIVE | | |
|---|
| 0 | PI 673426 | 'erl1-1' | Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench | Texas, United States | S9 | | | 2014 | DEVELOPED | | | | | | Genetic material | Two allelic sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] erect leaf (erl) mutants were isolated from an Annotated Individually-pedigreed Mutagenized Sorghum (AIMS) mutant library developed at the Plant Stress and Germplasm Development Unit, at Lubbock, Texas. The two mutants, erl1 -1 and erl1-2, were isolated from two independently pedigreed M3 families mutagenized with ethyl methanesulfonate in a leading sorghum inbred line, BTx623, which was used to sequence the sorghum genome. Both mutants have been backcrossed three times to the wild-type (WT) BTx623 and shown to be a stable recessive mutation on a nuclear gene. The F1 plants derived from crosses between the two mutants displayed the erect leaf phenotype, indicating the mutations that result in the erect leaf phenotype from the two mutants are on a same gene. Both mutants have upright and slightly short leaves and reduced height. The panicles from both mutants are smaller than WT even after three backcrosses. As a highly penetrant trait mediated by a single gene, these mutants may serve as a novel resource to design canopy architecture for optimizing radiation capture and use efficiency to increase biomass and grain yield. | 1922263 | PI 673426 |
| 1 | PI 673427 | 'erl1-2' | Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench | Texas, United States | S9 | | | 2014 | DEVELOPED | | | | | | Genetic material | Two allelic sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] erect leaf (erl) mutants were isolated from an Annotated Individually-pedigreed Mutagenized Sorghum (AIMS) mutant library developed at the Plant Stress and Germplasm Development Unit, at Lubbock, Texas. The two mutants, erl1 -1 and erl1-2, were isolated from two independently pedigreed M3 families mutagenized with ethyl methanesulfonate in a leading sorghum inbred line, BTx623, which was used to sequence the sorghum genome. Both mutants have been backcrossed three times to the wild-type (WT) BTx623 and shown to be a stable recessive mutation on a nuclear gene. The F1 plants derived from crosses between the two mutants displayed the erect leaf phenotype, indicating the mutations that result in the erect leaf phenotype from the two mutants are on a same gene. Both mutants have upright and slightly short leaves and reduced height. The panicles from both mutants are smaller than WT even after three backcrosses. As a highly penetrant trait mediated by a single gene, these mutants may serve as a novel resource to design canopy architecture for optimizing radiation capture and use efficiency to increase biomass and grain yield. | 1922264 | PI 673427 |