Allelic diversities in rice starch biosynthesis lead to a diverse array of rice eating and cooking qualities

Zhixi Tian(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qian Qian(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Qiaoquan Liu(Yangzhou University), Meixian Yan(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Xinfang Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Changjie Yan(Yangzhou University), Guifu Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhenyu Gao(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Shuzhu Tang(Yangzhou University), Dali Zeng(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Yonghong Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianming Yu(Kansas State University), Minghong Gu(Yangzhou University), Jiayang Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 15, 2009
Cited by 604Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

More than half of the world's population uses rice as a source of carbon intake every day. Improving grain quality is thus essential to rice consumers. The three main properties that determine rice eating and cooking quality--amylose content, gel consistency, and gelatinization temperature--correlate with one another, but the underlying mechanism of these properties remains unclear. Through an association analysis approach, we found that genes related to starch synthesis cooperate with each other to form a fine regulating network that controls the eating and cooking quality and defines the correlation among these three properties. Genetic transformation results verified the association findings and also suggested the possibility of developing elite cultivars through modification with selected major and/or minor starch synthesis-related genes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis