ISOLATION OF CHEMICALLY-INDUCED MUTANTS IN BORAGE (BORAGO-OFFICINALISL.)

Citation
A. Deharobailon et M. Delrio, ISOLATION OF CHEMICALLY-INDUCED MUTANTS IN BORAGE (BORAGO-OFFICINALISL.), Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society, 75(2), 1998, pp. 281-283
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Food Science & Tenology","Chemistry Applied
ISSN journal
0003021X
Volume
75
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
281 - 283
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-021X(1998)75:2<281:IOCMIB>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
gamma-Linolenic acid (GLA, 18.3 Delta 6,9,12) has been reported to be helpful in the treatment of a wide range of disorders. Borage (Borago officinalis L.) is an annual plant of renewed interest because the see ds are an important source of GLA. The failure to retain mature seeds until harvest limits the total seed and GLA yield per plant and is the major limiting factor for the commercial production of borage. In the course of a mutagenesis program, an agronomically good line of white- flowered borage (RG-001) was treated with ethyl methane sulfonate. As a result of this program, several types of mutants were identified in the M2 generation of plants: a chlorotic mutant (type A); a mutant wit h increased number of sepals, petals, and ovules but reduced fertility (type B); and mutants with closed flowers (type C1) or partially open ed flowers (type C2) that had increased seed retention. The type C mut ants are the first reported borage plants with a nonshattering habit. After crossing type B plants with normal plants, a new mutant (type B1 ) was obtained with higher fertility and higher seed production per fl ower than those from normal plants. These mutants could be used to dev elop borage lines that would be superior to those currently available as a source of GLA.