A winter bread wheat accession from the Arsenal collection was genetically examined to study the results of introgression,
which substantially changed the physiological and morphological traits of the original spring cultivar Rodina. Apart from
its winter habit, the accession was characterized by awned speltoid spikes, suggesting introgression into chromosome 5A, which
carries marker genes in the order
Vrn-A1-Q-B1. Genetic analysis showed that the chromosome fragment introgressed from
Aegilops speltoides recombined well with the homeologous region of bread wheat chromosome 5A in the region between the
Vrn-A1 and
Q genes. Recombination between the
Vrn-A1 and
B1 genes was not detected, and it was assumed that the order of the marker genes of chromosome 5A was inverted to produce
Q-Vrn-A1-B1. When the winter introgression line was crossed with
Triticum spelta L., an interaction of two dominant genes determining the spike character was for the first time detected in F
1, increasing the spike length and the number of spikelets, and followed with transgression in F
2. It was assumed that
Ae. speltoides had a homeoallelic speltoid gene, which was designated as
Q
S
.
Original Russian Text © A.V. Simonov, T.A. Pshenichnikova, I.F. Lapochkina, 2009, published in Genetika, 2009, Vol. 45, No.
7, pp. 913–919.