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. 2011 Jun 7;30(10):1865–1879. doi: 10.1007/s00299-011-1094-y

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

S. pennellii mutants altered in developmental traits. a Leaves from wild-type plants. b Mutant with chlorophyll-deficient leaves. c Comparison between root development in vitro of a mutant (right) with respect to wild-type plants (left). d Two clonal replicates of an mutant (right) altered in growth habit with respect to that of wild-type plants (left). e Inflorescence architecture of an mutant (right) and that of a wild-type plant (left). f Homeotic conversion of floral whorls in a T-DNA line (down) as compared to normal floral development in wild type plants (up). g, h Fruits of WT (g) and a mutant with larger size fruit (h). Crosses between WT and mutant were carried out using the mutant as donor parental. i On a WT plant, one fruit of WT (left) and one of the hybrid WT × mutant (right), with a fruit size around three times greater than that of the WT