Association Mapping Reveals Novel Genetic Loci Contributing to Flooding Tolerance during Germination in Indica Rice

Mengchen Zhang(China National Rice Research Institute), Qing Lu(Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Wei Wu, Xiaojun Niu(China National Rice Research Institute), Caihong Wang(China National Rice Research Institute), Feng Yue(China National Rice Research Institute), Qun Xu(China National Rice Research Institute), Shan Wang(China National Rice Research Institute), Xiaoping Yuan(China National Rice Research Institute), Hanyong Yu(China National Rice Research Institute), Yiping Wang(China National Rice Research Institute), Xinghua Wei(China National Rice Research Institute)
Frontiers in Plant Science
April 25, 2017
Cited by 88Open Access
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Abstract

Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is the only cereal crop that possesses the ability to germinate under flooded or other oxygen-deficient conditions. Rapid elongation of the coleoptile is a perfect response to flooding during germination, with coleoptile length differing among various rice varieties. Despite multiple studies have uncovered valuable information concerning this trait by focusing on the physiological metabolism of oxygen stress, the underlying genetic mechanism still remains unknown. In the present study, we screened coleoptile lengths of 432 indica varieties germinated in two environments (normal and flooded) and found more variation existing in flooded coleoptile length (FCL) rather than in normal coleoptile length (NCL). With the phenotypic data of NCL, FCL and FTI (flooding tolerance index), a genome-wide association study (GWAS) was performed by using 5291 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers. We detected two, eleven and nine significant SNPs under a mixed linear mode for NCL, FCL and FTI, respectively. Of these SNPs, five were shared by FCL and FTI. Haplotype and phenotype effect analysis on the highest ranking locus indicated one of the two haplotypes contributed to coleoptile elongation remarkably. To better understand the controlling gene of this locus, reported expression profile data was applied. We focused on LOC_Os06g03520, a candidate gene which was highly induced by anoxia (~507 fold). Sequence analysis in 51 varieties demonstrated Hap.2 associated perfectly with flooding tolerance. Further studies on this gene may help explore the molecular mechanism of rice flooding tolerance during germination. We believe our discoveries may conduce to isolating major genes and aid the improvement of flooding tolerance in modern breeding programs.


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