| Literature DB >> 26187921 |
Weiwei Wen1, Kun Li2, Saleh Alseekh3, Nooshin Omranian3, Lijun Zhao2, Yang Zhou2, Yingjie Xiao2, Min Jin2, Ning Yang2, Haijun Liu2, Alexandra Florian3, Wenqiang Li2, Qingchun Pan2, Zoran Nikoloski3, Jianbing Yan4, Alisdair R Fernie5.
Abstract
Deciphering the influence of genetics on primary metabolism in plants will provide insights useful for genetic improvement and enhance our fundamental understanding of plant growth and development. Although maize (Zea mays) is a major crop for food and feed worldwide, the genetic architecture of its primary metabolism is largely unknown. Here, we use high-density linkage mapping to dissect large-scale metabolic traits measured in three different tissues (leaf at seedling stage, leaf at reproductive stage, and kernel at 15 d after pollination [DAP]) of a maize recombinant inbred line population. We identify 297 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) with moderate (86.2% of the mapped QTL, R(2) = 2.4 to 15%) to major effects (13.8% of the mapped QTL, R(2) >15%) for 79 primary metabolites across three tissues. Pairwise epistatic interactions between these identified loci are detected for more than 25.9% metabolites explaining 6.6% of the phenotypic variance on average (ranging between 1.7 and 16.6%), which implies that epistasis may play an important role for some metabolites. Key candidate genes are highlighted and mapped to carbohydrate metabolism, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and several important amino acid biosynthetic and catabolic pathways, with two of them being further validated using candidate gene association and expression profiling analysis. Our results reveal a metabolite-metabolite-agronomic trait network that, together with the genetic determinants of maize primary metabolism identified herein, promotes efficient utilization of metabolites in maize improvement.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26187921 PMCID: PMC4531352 DOI: 10.1105/tpc.15.00208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell ISSN: 1040-4651 Impact factor: 11.277