Mapping of genes that play major roles in
cotton fiber development is an important step toward
their cloning and manipulation, and provides a test of
their relationships (if any) to agriculturally-important
QTLs. Seven previously identified fiber mutants, four
dominant (Li1, Li2, N1 and Fbl) and three recessive
(n2, sma-4(ha), and sma-4(fz)), were genetically mapped
in six F2 populations comprising 124 or more plants
each. For those mutants previously assigned to chromosomes
by using aneuploids or by linkage to other
morphological markers, all map locations were concordant
except n2, which mapped to the homoeolog of the
chromosome previously reported. Three mutations with
primary effects on fuzz fibers (N1, Fbl, n2) mapped near
the likelihood peaks for QTLs that affected lint fiber
productivity in the same populations, perhaps suggesting
pleiotropic effects on both fiber types. However, only
Li1 mapped within the likelihood interval for 191 previously
detected lint fiber QTLs discovered in non-mutant
crosses, suggesting that these mutations may occur
in genes that played early roles in cotton fiber evolution,
and for which new allelic variants are quickly eliminated
from improved germplasm. A close positional association
between sma-4(ha), two leaf and stem-borne trichome
mutants (t1, t2), and a gene previously implicated
in fiber development, sucrose synthase, raises questions
about the possibility that these genes may be functionally
related. Increasing knowledge of the correspondence
of the cotton and Arabidopsis genomes provides several
avenues by which genetic dissection of cotton fiber
development may be accelerated.
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