Genetic Analysis of Recombinant Inbred Lines for<i>Sorghum bicolor × Sorghum propinquum</i>

Wenqian Kong(University of Georgia), Huizhe Jin(University of Georgia), Cleve D. Franks(Cropping Systems Research Laboratory), Changsoo Kim(University of Georgia), Rajib Bandopadhyay(University of Georgia), Mukesh Kumar Rana(University of Georgia), Susan Auckland(University of Georgia), Valorie H. Goff(University of Georgia), Lisa K. Rainville(University of Georgia), Gloria Burow(Cropping Systems Research Laboratory), C. A. Woodfin(Cropping Systems Research Laboratory), John Burke(Cropping Systems Research Laboratory), Andrew H. Paterson(University of Georgia)
G3 Genes Genomes Genetics
January 1, 2013
Cited by 38Open Access
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Abstract

We describe a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of 161 F5 genotypes for the widest euploid cross that can be made to cultivated sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) using conventional techniques, S. bicolor × Sorghum propinquum, that segregates for many traits related to plant architecture, growth and development, reproduction, and life history. The genetic map of the S. bicolor × S. propinquum RILs contains 141 loci on 10 linkage groups collectively spanning 773.1 cM. Although the genetic map has DNA marker density well-suited to quantitative trait loci mapping and samples most of the genome, our previous observations that sorghum pericentromeric heterochromatin is recalcitrant to recombination is highlighted by the finding that the vast majority of recombination in sorghum is concentrated in small regions of euchromatin that are distal to most chromosomes. The advancement of the RIL population in an environment to which the S. bicolor parent was well adapted (indeed bred for) but the S. propinquum parent was not largely eliminated an allele for short-day flowering that confounded many other traits, for example, permitting us to map new quantitative trait loci for flowering that previously eluded detection. Additional recombination that has accrued in the development of this RIL population also may have improved resolution of apices of heterozygote excess, accounting for their greater abundance in the F5 than the F2 generation. The S. bicolor × S. propinquum RIL population offers advantages over early-generation populations that will shed new light on genetic, environmental, and physiological/biochemical factors that regulate plant growth and development.


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