Epistatic gene effects on the yield of the parents of F-1, F-2, BC1 and BC2 progeny

Citation
J. Zdravkovic et al., Epistatic gene effects on the yield of the parents of F-1, F-2, BC1 and BC2 progeny, ACT PHYS PL, 22(3), 2000, pp. 261-265
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ACTA PHYSIOLOGIAE PLANTARUM
ISSN journal
01375881 → ACNP
Volume
22
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
261 - 265
Database
ISI
SICI code
0137-5881(2000)22:3<261:EGEOTY>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The genetic analysis of 5 tomato hybrids (Danubius F-1, Luna F-1, Lido F-1, Balkan F-1 and Mi-10 F-1) was made. We produced their F-1. F-2, BC1 and BC 2 generations and analysed their yield (on the first three flower branches) as well as some of the yield components of tomato fruits (mean fruit weigh t, mean fruit weight on the first flower branch, fruit length, fruit width, and number of locules). In order to estimate the gene effects, we applied the additive-dominance mode with three and six parameters. Epistatic gene e ffects were estimated by applying the six-parameter mode (Mather and Jinks 1982). As for yield and yield components, there were significant difference s between the mean values of parents and their progeny. On the basis of the investigated genetic parameters, the obtained results suggested that the a dditive and dominance gene effects prevailed in the yield and yield compone nts (Danubius F-1, Luna F-1, Lido F-1, Mi-10 F-1), whereas epistatic gene e ffects were excluded. As for the hybrid Balkan Fl, we recorded significant gene effects, both the additive and the dominance ones in the yield inherit ance: additive x additive and dominance x dominance (with the negative sign ). The estimated values of the epistatic gene effects were the most promine nt in inheriting the feature average fruit weight on the first flower branc h - additive x dominance gene effects. They represented the most frequent t ype of the interallele interaction recorded in the investigated hybrids.