Single gene control of postzygotic self-incompatibility in poke milkweed, Asclepias exaltata L.

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Abstract

Most individuals of Asclepias exaltata are self-sterile, but all plants lack prezygotic barriers to self-fertilization. To determine whether postzygotic rejection of self-fertilized ovules is due to late-acting self- incompatibility or to extreme, early acting inbreeding depression, we performed three diallel crosses among self-sterile plants related as full- sibs. The full-sibs segregated into four compatibility classes, suggesting that late acting self-incompatibility is controlled by a single gene (S- locus). Crosses between plants sharing one or both alleles at the S-locus are incompatible. An additional diallel cross was done among full-sib progeny from a cross of a self-sterile and a self-fertile plant. These progeny grouped into two compatibility classes, and plants within classes displayed varying levels of self-fertility. This suggests that the occasional self- fertility documented in natural pollinations is caused by pseudo-self- fertility alleles that alter the functioning of the S-locus.

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Lipow, S. R., & Wyatt, R. (2000). Single gene control of postzygotic self-incompatibility in poke milkweed, Asclepias exaltata L. Genetics, 154(2), 893–907. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/154.2.893

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