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Dr. Jeffrey M. Osborn
Dean of the School of Science and Professor of Biology
The College of New Jersey |
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Publication Abstract
Janick-Buckner, D., J. D. Hammock, J. M. Johnson,
J. M. Osborn, and B. Buckner. 1999. Biochemical and ultrastructural
analysis of the
y10 mutant of maize.
The Journal of Heredity 90:
507-513.
Abstract
The y10 mutant of maize has been categorized as a carotenoid mutant due to its
pale-yellow endosperm color and the albino seedling that develops following
germination of the kernel. Analysis of endosperm and seedling leaf extracts
revealed that the carotenoid content of endosperm and seedling leaf is
significantly reduced compared to wild-type siblings. However, a block at a
specific step in the carotenoid biosynthetic pathway was not detected. When y10y10
seedlings were grown on defined medium containing geraniol or fernesol,
which are Isoprenoid precursors for both carotenoids and the phytyl chain of
chlorophyll, we found a significant increase in the amount of carotenoids in
the leaf tissue. These isoprenoisd precursors appear to complement the y10
mutation, although not to wild-type sibling levels. Thus the apparent defect
in the y10 mutant affects a step in isoprenoid biosynthesis that precedes
the synthesis of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate. Examination of seedling leaves
by light and transmission electron microscopy revealed that the drastic reduction
in photosyntheitc pigments in the y10 mutant has a dramatic effect on the
cellular architecture of leaf tissue. In comparison to other albino mutants
of maize that have been analyzed at the ultrastructural level, the alterations
in plastid architecture of y10 mutants are quite severe.
Keywords:maize, plastid ultrastructure, y10 mutant,
biochemistry
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