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Article|15 Jul 2018|OPEN
Attention sports fans! The far-reaching contributions of bud sport mutants to horticulture and plant biology
Toshi M. Foster1 , and María José Aranzana,2,3
1The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited, Private Bag 11600, Palmerston North 4474, New Zealand
2IRTA (Institut de Recerca i Tecnologia Agroalimentàries), Barcelona, Spain
3Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics (CRAG) CSIC-IRTA-UAB-UB, Campus UAB, Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain
*Corresponding author. E-mail: Toshi.Foster@plantandfood.co.nz

Horticulture Research 5,
Article number: 44 (2018)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0062-x
Views: 954

Received: 14 May 2018
Revised: 06 Jun 2018
Accepted: 07 Jun 2018
Published online: 15 Jul 2018

Abstract

A bud sport is a lateral shoot, inflorescence or single flower/fruit with a visibly different phenotype from the rest of the plant. The new phenotype is often caused by a stable somatic mutation in a single cell that is passed on to its clonal descendants and eventually populates part or all of a meristem. In many cases, a bud sport can be vegetatively propagated, thereby preserving the novel phenotype without sexual reproduction. Bud sports provide new characteristics while retaining the desirable qualities of the parent plant, which is why many bud sports have been developed into popular cultivars. We present an overview of the history of bud sports, the causes and methods of detecting somaclonal variation, and the types of mutant phenotypes that have arisen spontaneously. We focus on examples where the molecular or cytological changes causing the phenotype have been identified. Analysis of these sports has provided valuable insight into developmental processes, gene function and regulation, and in some cases has revealed new information about layer-specific roles of some genes. Examination of the molecular changes causing a phenotype and in some cases reversion back to the original state has contributed to our understanding of the mechanisms that drive genomic evolution.