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June 23, 2006
Historic
mutant corn garden grows at Cornell
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Joe
Ogrodnick/NYSAES
These
three photos show how mutant genes on a corn plant's
chromosomes can alter how the plant looks. The top photo
shows white leaves, the middle shows a zebra pattern, while
the third plant has striped leaves.
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Changing a single gene can
greatly alter a maize plant's appearance and function. A gene
mutation on the plant's second chromosome, for example, will
dwarf the corn, causing it to grow only a foot high in some
cases.
To create a living maize
chromosome map, a garden with 106 maize plants, each with a
different type of mutation, has been planted at Cornell. The
mutant plants are arranged in the same order in the garden as
their altered genes occur on the maize plant's chromosomes.
The garden, in the Cornell
Plantations Emerson Garden, across from the McClintock shed on
Plantations Road, is a joint project of Cornell's Department of
Plant Breeding and Genetics and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) at Cornell.
The garden actually recreates a
maize-chromosome-map garden planted in 1932 in honor of the Sixth
International Congress of Genetics held in Ithaca that year. The
current garden will pay tribute to Cornell's pioneer maize
geneticists, including Rollins A. Emerson and Nobel laureate
Barbara McClintock, and next year, it will commemorate the 100th
anniversary of Cornell's Department of Plant Breeding and
Genetics and the 75th anniversary of the original garden at the
1932 genetics meeting.
Each plant in the garden
reveals an obvious change that has been found in nature. "These
are just mutants that are naturally occurring; it's not like
somebody created them," said Margaret Smith, professor of
plant breeding and genetics and the university's maize breeder.
"There are a variety of naturally occurring mutations that
show loss of function or show a difference in how the plant
looks."
For example, when a particular
gene on the short arm of chromosome four is altered, the plant's
reaction to gravity -- its geotropic response -- is affected.
Called "lazy plant," such corn grows horizontally along
the ground. A gene mutation in chromosome three's short arm, on
the other hand, causes the plant to more closely resemble tall
grass, with little, thin leaves and many stalks.
To mimic the 10 chromosomes
from each parent in the maize genome, the garden has been planted
in 10 rows, each containing plants in sequence of their specific
mutant genes.
The garden was planted in late
June, more than a month later than when most maize experimental
plots are planted in the Ithaca area.
"We wanted it to be
looking good in September when students return, and professors
can visit the garden with their students," said Denise
Costich, a research associate with USDA-ARS and one of the
principal organizers of the garden, which she expects to be
visited by classes in genetics, plant breeding and agronomy.
"Seventy-five years ago
the maize geneticists planted a garden like this with all the
mutants they knew about then," said Smith. "It is kind
of fun to recreate that and see how much richer our knowledge of
maize genetics has become."
Since maize plants are annuals,
the garden will be planted each year. Smith plans to conduct
controlled self-pollinations, in which pollen from a mutant's
tassels will be used to fertilize its own eggs in the ear,
creating new kernels (seeds) that carry the same mutation.
Hank Bass, an associate
professor of biological science at Florida State University,
provided the starter seeds for the project.
Source
/ Credit: Cornell University
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