Genetic and Cytoplasmic-Nuclear Male Sterility in Sorghum
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This article is published in Plant Breeding Reviews.The article was published on 2010-06-22 and is currently open access. It has received 36 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sterility.read more
Citations
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Influence of cytoplasmic-nuclear male sterility on agronomic performance of sorghum hybrids
TL;DR: The results obtained allowed us to assess the significance or otherwise of cytoplasmic differences in respect of gca effects of the A-lines and the mean performance and sca effects ofThe hybrids by comparing with the least disadvantaged groups.
Book ChapterDOI
Disease Resistance in Sorghum
I. K. Das,P. Rajendrakumar +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter provides up to date information about major sorghum diseases and their management with emphasis on host-plant resistance.
DissertationDOI
Genetic differentiation, heterotic performance and grain yield determinate traits of locally adapted sorghum genotypes in contrasting environments in Ethiopia
TL;DR: The use of abbreviations in the thesis changed from time to time according to the need to clarify the aims and objectives of the thesis.
Book ChapterDOI
Advances in Sorghum Disease Resistance
TL;DR: This chapter provides up-to-date information about major sorghum diseases and their effects on end use–specific cultivar development and provides a brief account of identification and understanding of disease resistance in Sorghum along with utilization of host resistance for cultivars development.
Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of A1, A2, A3, A4(M), A4(G) and A4(VZM) cytoplasms in iso-nuclear backgrounds for grain mold resistance.
TL;DR: The A1 cytoplasm is the best suited for the development of sorghum hybrids for the rainy season adaptation with grain mold resistance, however, use of alternate cytoplasms for hybrid development will not increase susceptibility to grain mold in commercial grain production.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
A simplified classification of cultivated Sorghum
Jack R. Harlan,J. M. J. de Wet +1 more
TL;DR: The simplified classification presented for Sorghum bicolor (Linn.) Moencihs is so easy that it requires no special knowledge of the crop to correctly identify mature heads and spikelets.
Book ChapterDOI
Functioning and Variation of Cytoplasmic Genomes: Lessons from Cytoplasmic–Nuclear Interactions Affecting Male Fertility in Plants
Maureen R. Hanson,Mary F. Conde +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter describes the male sterility in Petunia, maize, sorghum, sugarbeet, Nicotiana, Vicia faba, sunflower, Solanum, cruciferous species, pearl millet, carrot, wheat and rye, and barley.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cytoplasmic Male‐Sterility For Hybrid Sorghum Seed Production1
J. C. Stephens,R. F. Holland +1 more
TL;DR: All possible crosses between heterozygous (Msms) Day, Double Dwarf Yellow Sooner milo and Texas Blackhull kafir were made to determine if cytoplasmic factors might account for the F, male-sterility in the combination of msms Day x kafIR, and the evidence indicated that theF, sterility was genetic rather than cytop lasmic.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mitochondrial genome rearrangement leads to extension and relocation of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene in sorghum
TL;DR: The novel 9E COXI, apparently arising from at least two rearrangements, affects transcription and gene product.
Journal ArticleDOI
Transcript processing internal to a mitochondrial open reading frame is correlated with fertility restoration in male-sterile sorghum
Hoang V. Tang,D. R. Pring,Lynn C. Shaw,Reggie A. Salazar,Figuhr R. Muza,Bin Yan,K. F. Schertz +6 more
TL;DR: Novel observations indicate that mitochondrial open reading frames associated with cms in different species can include highly similar motifs, and that fertility restoration could involve a mechanism by which synthesis of a cms-associated gene product may be precluded through internal transcript cleavage.
Related Papers (5)
Stability analysis of seed in A X B crosses involving diverse cytoplasms in sorghum.
A. G. Kishan,S. T. Borikar +1 more