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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: New Phytol. 2011 Nov 11;193(2):494–503. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.03949.x

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Repeatable morphological phenotypes identified in the transgenomic screen. Photographs of additional independent T1s with repeatable phenotypes are shown in Supporting Information Figs S1 and S2. (a) Fruits of Leavenworthia alabamica (left) and Arabidopsis thaliana (right) differ in their length-to-width ratio. The two stunted valves in the center were taken from two independent T1s from clone 11_11B and are representative of fruit from each plant. Clone 05_01C also yielded a repeatable short fruit phenotype. (b) Petals from A. thaliana flowers (left) are more evenly spaced than those from clone 09_09A (right). Although a small proportion of flowers on even wildtype plant have unevenly spaced petals, repeatable T1 plants from this clone were identified as having an elevated frequency of such flowers. (c) Abnormal twisting and contortion of rosette leaves on a T1 from clone 11_01D. Clone 11_01D also yielded a T1 plant with some lobed rosette leaves and two T1 plants with abnormal flowers (see Fig. S2). (d) Inflorescence with clustered fruit on a T1 plant from clone 12_03E. (e) A T1 plant from clone 12_05A displays cauline leaves developed decurrently along the primary axis. (f) Close-up picture of decurrent cauline leaf from the T1 of 12_05A (E). (g) A dwarf T1 plant from clone 12_06G.