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Alejandra M. Landau, María G. Pacheco, Alberto R. Prina, A Second infA Plastid Gene Point Mutation Shows a Compensatory Effect on the Expression of the Cytoplasmic Line 2 (CL2) Syndrome in Barley, Journal of Heredity, Volume 102, Issue 5, September-October 2011, Pages 633–639, https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esr061
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Abstract
The IF1 protein is one of the factors controlling translation initiation in bacteria. This protein is encoded by the infA gene, which, in several higher plants, is located in the plastome. Cytoplasmic Line 2 (CL2), an alboviridis barley mutant, was the first to be proposed as an infA gene mutation (T 157 C) in higher plants. This mutant was isolated from a chloroplast mutator genotype (cpm/cpm) and was made genetically stable by backcrosses with a wild-type nuclear genotype. In the present work, genetically stable CL2 plants were backcrossed as females by cpm/cpm plants in order to regain the mutator activity. Interestingly, a seedling carrying a first leaf blade with a darker green stripe on a typical CL2-mutant background was observed in the F4 generation. The T 157 C transition was confirmed in tissues from the CL2 background, whereas a second transition (A 178 G) was also found in the darker stripe. Two clearly different levels of CL2 syndrome were observed in the seedlings of the F5 and F6 progenies. Those of the greener group carried both transitions. These results suggest a compensatory effect of the second mutation and support the involvement of the infA plastid gene in CL2 syndrome, confirming CL2 as the first mutant of this gene reported in higher plants.