| Literature DB >> 28196091 |
Muhammad Rizwan1, Muhammad Aslam2, Muhammad Jawad Asghar1, Ghulam Abbas1, Tariq Mahmud Shah1, Hussein Shimelis3.
Abstract
Lentil is a poor competitor of weeds and its sensitivity to herbicides is a major hurdle for large scale production. The present study was conducted to select herbicide resistant lentil genotypes through seed mutagenesis. Seeds of three advanced lentil genotypes (LPP 11001, LPP 11100 and LPP 11116) were treated with two different concentrations of ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS; 0.1 and 0.2%), hydrazine hydrate (HH; 0.02 and 0.03%) and sodium azide (SA; 0.01 and 0.02%) to develop M1 seed. The M2 was screened against two herbicides including Ally Max 28.6% SG (X = 34.58 g/ha and 1.5X = 51.87 g/ha) and Atlantis 3.6% WG (X = 395.2 g/ha and 1.5X = 592.8 g/ha) using the following three screening methods: post plant emergence (PPE), pre-plant incorporation (PPI) and seed priming (SP). Data were recorded on survival index and survival percentage from each experimental unit of every population. Plants in all populations were categorized following their reaction to herbicides. The newly developed populations showed greater variation for herbicide resistance when compared to their progenitors. Phenotypic traits were significantly reduced in all the screening environments. Overall, 671 herbicide resistant mutants were selected from all testing environments. The seeds from selected plants were re-mutagenized at 150 Gy of gamma radiation and evaluated against higher dose of herbicides. This allowed selection of 134 herbicide resistant mutants. The selected mutants are useful germplasm for herbicide resistance breeding of lentil.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28196091 PMCID: PMC5308809 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Description of lentil genotypes used in present study.
| Sr. # | Genotype | Pedigree | Genetic makeup |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | LPP 11001 | NL 20–24 × Masoor 93 | Hybrid |
| 2 | LPP 11100 | NL 30-5-2 × (NL 96 × Masoor 93) | Hybrid |
| 3 | LPP 11116 | NL 96680/100 Gy | Mutant |
Experiment detail consisting of variables, their levels and number.
| Variables | Details | Number |
|---|---|---|
| Genotypes | LPP 11001, LPP 11100 and LPP 11116 | 03 |
| Chemical mutagens | Ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), Hydrazine Hydrate (HH) and Sodium Azide (SA), | 03 |
| Doses of each mutagen | EMS (0.1% & 0.2%), SA (0.01% & 0.02%), HH (0.02% & 0.03%) | 02 |
| Herbicides | Ally Max (Metsulfuron methyl, Tribenuron methyl) and Atlantis (Mesosulfuron methyl, Idosulfuron methyl) | 02 |
| Doses of each herbicide | Ally Max = X (34.58 g/ha), 1.5X (51.87 g/ha) Atlantis = X (395.2 g/ha), 1.5X (592.8 g/ha) | 02 |
| Screening methods | Post Plant Emergence (PPE), Pre-Plant Incorporation (PPI) and Seed Priming (SP) | 03 |
Description of M2 populations of lentil derived through chemical mutagenesis.
| Population # | Name/Pedigree | Total no. of seeds harvested from M1 Generation |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | LPP 11001/EMS 0.1% | 1547 |
| 2 | LPP 11001/EMS 0.2% | 475 |
| 3 | LPP 11001/HH 0.02% | 4138 |
| 4 | LPP 11001/HH 0.03% | 3090 |
| 5 | LPP 11001/SA 0.01% | 1327 |
| 6 | LPP 11001/SA 0.02% | 1711 |
| 7 | LPP 11116/EMS 0.1% | 10769 |
| 8 | LPP 11116/EMS 0.2% | 3815 |
| 9 | LPP 11116/HH 0.02% | 9277 |
| 10 | LPP 11116/HH 0.03% | 10240 |
| 11 | LPP 11116/SA 0.01% | 9033 |
| 12 | LPP 11116/SA 0.02% | 6947 |
| 13 | LPP 11100/EMS 0.1% | 3055 |
| 14 | LPP 11100/EMS 0.2% | 647 |
| 15 | LPP 11100/HH 0.02% | 4297 |
| 16 | LPP 11100/HH 0.03% | 3050 |
| 17 | LPP 11100/SA 0.01% | 2770 |
| 18 | LPP 11100/SA 0.02% | 2575 |
| 19 | LPP 11001/Parent | 1440 |
| 20 | LPP 11116/Parent | 1440 |
| 21 | LPP11100/Parent | 1440 |
Fig 1Scale used for categorizing lentil plants for their reaction against herbicides.
Analysis of variance for survival index and survival % of 21 populations of lentil screened through different methods against different doses of herbicides.
| Source of variation | Degrees of Freedom | Mean Squares | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Survival Index | Survival % | ||
| Model | 269 | 0.006** | 68.39** |
| Error | 54 | 0.002 | 35.30 |
| Corrected Total | 323 | ||
| Replicate (R) | 2 | 0.023** | 323.15** |
| Screening methods (S) | 2 | 0.114** | 811.78** |
| R × S = Error S | 4 | 0.005 | 65.64 |
| Populations (P) | 20 | 0.001** | 32.00** |
| S × P | 40 | 0.0006 | 29.34 |
| P × R within S | 12 | 0.002 | 10.55 |
| Herbicides (H) | 3 | 0.22** | 1982.32** |
| H × S | 6 | 0.094** | 824.16** |
| H × P | 60 | 0.001 | 18.01 |
| H × S × P | 120 | 0.001 | 25.14 |
p ≤0.01 = Highly significant**, p ≤0.05 = Significant and p >0.05 = Non-significant.
Fig 2Response of 21 populations of lentil for survival index at different doses of Ally max at three different screening methods.
Fig 3Response of 21 populations of lentil for survival index at different doses of Atlantis at three different screening methods.
Fig 4Response of 21 populations of lentil for survival percentage at different doses of Ally max at three different screening methods.
Fig 5Response of 21 populations of lentil for survival percentage at different doses of Atlantis at three different screening methods.
Fig 6Reaction of M2 populations of lentil against different herbicides in screening through different methods (A = Post plant emergence, B = Pre-plant incorporation and C = Seed priming).