Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations

Excessive amounts of metal are toxic and severely affect plant growth and development. Understanding the genetic control of metal tolerance is crucial to improve rice resistance to Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity. The multi-parent advanced generation inter-cross (MAGIC) populations were genotyped using a 55...

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Main Authors: Lijun Meng, Baoxiang Wang, Xiangqian Zhao, Kimberly Ponce, Qian Qian, Guoyou Ye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.01822/full
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spelling doaj-558d6d2ccfc04dd2ab822933f14b88312020-11-24T22:28:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2017-10-01810.3389/fpls.2017.01822300894Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC PopulationsLijun Meng0Lijun Meng1Baoxiang Wang2Xiangqian Zhao3Xiangqian Zhao4Kimberly Ponce5Qian Qian6Guoyou Ye7Guoyou Ye8CAAS-IRRI Joint Laboratory for Genomics-Assisted Germplasm Enhancement, Agricultural Genomics Institute in Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Shenzhen, ChinaRice Breeding Platform, International Rice Research Institute, Metro Manila, PhilippinesLianyungang Institute of Agricultural Sciences in Jiangsu Xuhuai Region, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Lianyungang, ChinaRice Breeding Platform, International Rice Research Institute, Metro Manila, PhilippinesInstitute of Crop Science and Nuclear Technology Utilization, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Zhejiang, ChinaRice Breeding Platform, International Rice Research Institute, Metro Manila, PhilippinesCAAS-IRRI Joint Laboratory for Genomics-Assisted Germplasm Enhancement, Agricultural Genomics Institute in Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Shenzhen, ChinaCAAS-IRRI Joint Laboratory for Genomics-Assisted Germplasm Enhancement, Agricultural Genomics Institute in Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Shenzhen, ChinaRice Breeding Platform, International Rice Research Institute, Metro Manila, PhilippinesExcessive amounts of metal are toxic and severely affect plant growth and development. Understanding the genetic control of metal tolerance is crucial to improve rice resistance to Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity. The multi-parent advanced generation inter-cross (MAGIC) populations were genotyped using a 55 K rice SNP array and screened at the seedling stage for Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity using a hydroponics system. Association analysis was conducted by implementing a mixed linear model (MLM) for each of the five MAGIC populations double cross DC1 (founders were SAGC-08, HHZ5-SAL9-Y3-Y1, BP1976B-2-3-7-TB-1-1, PR33282-B-8-1-1-1-1-1), double cross DC2 (founders of double cross were FFZ1, CT 16658-5-2-2SR-2-3-6MP, IR 68, IR 02A127), eight parents population 8way (founders were SAGC-08, HHZ5-SAL9-Y3-Y1, BP1976B-2-3-7-TB-1-1, PR33282-B-8-1-1-1-1-1, FFZ1, CT 16658-5-2-2SR-2-3-6MP, IR 68, IR 02A127), DC12 (DC1+DC2) and rice multi-parent recombinant inbred line population RMPRIL (DC1+DC2+8way). A total of 21, 30, and 21 QTL were identified for Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity tolerance, respectively. For multi tolerance (MT) as Fe, Zn, and Al tolerance-related traits, three genomic regions, MT1.1 (chr.1: 35.4–36.3 Mb), MT1.2 (chr.1: 35.4–36.3 Mb), and MT3.2 (chr.3: 35.4-36.2 Mb) harbored QTL. The chromosomal regions MT2.1 (chr.2: 2.4–2.8 Mb), MT2.2 (chr.2: 24.5–25.8 Mb), MT4 (chr.4: 1.2 Mb Mb), MT8.1 (chr.8: 0.7–0.9 Mb), and MT8.2 (chr.8: 2.2–2.4 Mb) harbored QTL for Fe and Zn tolerance, while MT2.3 (chr.2: 30.5–31.6 Mb), MT3.1 (chr.3: 12.5–12.8 Mb), and MT6 (chr.6: 2.0–3.0 Mb) possessed QTL for Al and Zn tolerance. The chromosomal region MT9.1 (chr.9: 14.2–14.7 Mb) possessed QTL for Fe and Al tolerance. A total of 11 QTL were detected across different MAGIC populations and 12 clustered regions were detected under different metal conditions, suggesting that these genomic regions might constitute valuable regions for further marker-assisted selection (MAS) in breeding programs.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.01822/fullmetal toleranceseedling stageMAGIC populationassociation mappingrice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lijun Meng
Lijun Meng
Baoxiang Wang
Xiangqian Zhao
Xiangqian Zhao
Kimberly Ponce
Qian Qian
Guoyou Ye
Guoyou Ye
spellingShingle Lijun Meng
Lijun Meng
Baoxiang Wang
Xiangqian Zhao
Xiangqian Zhao
Kimberly Ponce
Qian Qian
Guoyou Ye
Guoyou Ye
Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
Frontiers in Plant Science
metal tolerance
seedling stage
MAGIC population
association mapping
rice
author_facet Lijun Meng
Lijun Meng
Baoxiang Wang
Xiangqian Zhao
Xiangqian Zhao
Kimberly Ponce
Qian Qian
Guoyou Ye
Guoyou Ye
author_sort Lijun Meng
title Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
title_short Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
title_full Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
title_fullStr Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
title_full_unstemmed Association Mapping of Ferrous, Zinc, and Aluminum Tolerance at the Seedling Stage in Indica Rice using MAGIC Populations
title_sort association mapping of ferrous, zinc, and aluminum tolerance at the seedling stage in indica rice using magic populations
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Excessive amounts of metal are toxic and severely affect plant growth and development. Understanding the genetic control of metal tolerance is crucial to improve rice resistance to Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity. The multi-parent advanced generation inter-cross (MAGIC) populations were genotyped using a 55 K rice SNP array and screened at the seedling stage for Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity using a hydroponics system. Association analysis was conducted by implementing a mixed linear model (MLM) for each of the five MAGIC populations double cross DC1 (founders were SAGC-08, HHZ5-SAL9-Y3-Y1, BP1976B-2-3-7-TB-1-1, PR33282-B-8-1-1-1-1-1), double cross DC2 (founders of double cross were FFZ1, CT 16658-5-2-2SR-2-3-6MP, IR 68, IR 02A127), eight parents population 8way (founders were SAGC-08, HHZ5-SAL9-Y3-Y1, BP1976B-2-3-7-TB-1-1, PR33282-B-8-1-1-1-1-1, FFZ1, CT 16658-5-2-2SR-2-3-6MP, IR 68, IR 02A127), DC12 (DC1+DC2) and rice multi-parent recombinant inbred line population RMPRIL (DC1+DC2+8way). A total of 21, 30, and 21 QTL were identified for Fe, Zn, and Al toxicity tolerance, respectively. For multi tolerance (MT) as Fe, Zn, and Al tolerance-related traits, three genomic regions, MT1.1 (chr.1: 35.4–36.3 Mb), MT1.2 (chr.1: 35.4–36.3 Mb), and MT3.2 (chr.3: 35.4-36.2 Mb) harbored QTL. The chromosomal regions MT2.1 (chr.2: 2.4–2.8 Mb), MT2.2 (chr.2: 24.5–25.8 Mb), MT4 (chr.4: 1.2 Mb Mb), MT8.1 (chr.8: 0.7–0.9 Mb), and MT8.2 (chr.8: 2.2–2.4 Mb) harbored QTL for Fe and Zn tolerance, while MT2.3 (chr.2: 30.5–31.6 Mb), MT3.1 (chr.3: 12.5–12.8 Mb), and MT6 (chr.6: 2.0–3.0 Mb) possessed QTL for Al and Zn tolerance. The chromosomal region MT9.1 (chr.9: 14.2–14.7 Mb) possessed QTL for Fe and Al tolerance. A total of 11 QTL were detected across different MAGIC populations and 12 clustered regions were detected under different metal conditions, suggesting that these genomic regions might constitute valuable regions for further marker-assisted selection (MAS) in breeding programs.
topic metal tolerance
seedling stage
MAGIC population
association mapping
rice
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.01822/full
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