Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Access keys NCBI Homepage MyNCBI Homepage Main Content Main Navigation
. 2004 Aug;94(2):289-95.
doi: 10.1093/aob/mch139. Epub 2004 Jun 30.

Unilateral incompatibility in Capsicum (Solanaceae): occurrence and taxonomic distribution

Affiliations

Unilateral incompatibility in Capsicum (Solanaceae): occurrence and taxonomic distribution

A Naci Onus et al. Ann Bot. 2004 Aug.

Abstract

Background and aims: Unilateral incompatibility (UI) occurs when pollinations between species are successful in one direction but not in the other. Self-incompatible (SI) species frequently show UI with genetically related, self-compatible (SC) species, as pollen of SI species is compatible on the SC pistil, but not vice versa. Many examples of unilateral incompatibility, and all those which have been studied most intensively, are found in the Solanaceae, particularly Lycopersicon, Solanum, Nicotiana and Petunia. The genus Capsicum is evolutionarily somewhat distant from Lycopersicon and Solanum and even further removed from Nicotiana and Petunia. Unilateral incompatibility has also been reported in Capsicum; however, this is the first comprehensive study of crosses between all readily available species in the genus.

Methods: All readily available (wild and domesticated) species in the genus are used as plant material, including the three genera from the Capsicum pubescens complex plus eight other species. Pollinations were made on pot-grown plants in a glasshouse. The number of pistils pollinated per cross varied (from five to 40 pistils per plant), depending on the numbers of flowers available. Pistils were collected 24 h after pollination and fixed for 3-24 h. After staining, pistils were mounted in a drop of stain, squashed gently under a cover slip and examined microscopically under ultra-violet light for pollen tube growth.

Key results: Unilateral incompatibility is confirmed in the C. pubescens complex. Its direction conforms to that predominant in the Solanaceae and other families, i.e. pistils of self-incompatible species, or self-compatible taxa closely related to self-incompatible species, inhibit pollen tubes of self-compatible species.

Conclusions: Unilateral incompatibility in Capsicum does not seem to have arisen to prevent introgression of self-compatibility into self-incompatible taxa, but as a by-product of divergence of the C. pubescens complex from the remainder of the genus.

PubMed Disclaimer

References

    1. Abdalla MMF, Hermsen JGT. 1972. Unilateral incompatibility: hypotheses, debate and its implications for plant breeding. Euphytica 21: 32–47.
    1. Ballard RE, McClure JW, Eshbaugh WH, Wilson KG. 1970. A chemosystematic study of selected taxa of Capsicum Amererican Journal of Botany 57: 225–233.
    1. Bermawie N, Pickersgill B. 1992. Pollen tube behaviour in intra-and interspecific pollinations in Capsicum Indonesian Journal of Crop Science 7: 37–53.
    1. Bernacchi D, Tanksley SD. 1997. An interspecific cross of Lycopersicon esculentum × L. hirsutum: linkage analysis and QTL analysis of sexual compatibility factors and floral traits. Genetics 147: 861–877. - PMC - PubMed
    1. Chetelat RT, DeVerna JW. 1991. Expression of unilateral incompatibility in pollen of Lycopersicon pennellii is determined by major loci on chromosome 1, 6 and 10. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 82: 704–712. - PubMed

Publication types