| Literature DB >> 29629488 |
Vijaipal Singh1, Ashok Kumar Singh2, Trilochan Mohapatra3, Gopala Krishnan S4, Ranjith Kumar Ellur4.
Abstract
Pusa Basmati 1121 (PB 1121) is a landmark Basmati rice variety having Basmati quality traits introgressed from traditional Basmati varieties such as Basmati 370 and Type 3. It was released for commercial cultivation in 2003. It possesses extra-long slender milled grains (9.00 mm), pleasant aroma, and an exceptionally high cooked kernel elongation ratio of 2.5 with a cooked kernel length of up to 22 mm, volume expansion more than four times, appealing taste, good mouth feel and easy digestibility. Owing to its exceptional quality characteristics, it has set new standards in the Basmati rice market. The cumulative foreign exchange earnings through export of PB 1121 since 2008 have been US$ 20.8 billion, which has brought prosperity to millions of Basmati farmers. During 2017, the farmers cultivating PB 1121 earned on an average US$ 1400/ha as against US$ 650/ha cultivating traditional Basmati, making it a highly profitable enterprise. Currently, PB 1121 is grown in ~ 70% of the total area under Basmati rice cultivation in India. It is the most common Basmati rice variety in rice grain quality research for developing mapping populations, genetic analyses and molecular mapping of Basmati quality traits. Additionally, it has been widely used in the Basmati rice breeding program across India, because of its superior quality attributes. This article presents an account of development of PB 1121, its major characteristic features and its flagship role in heralding a Basmati rice revolution. The prospective role of PB 1121 in Basmati rice improvement and future Basmati rice research as a whole is also presented.Entities:
Keywords: Aroma; Basmati rice; Genomics; Grain and cooking quality; Linear cooked kernel elongation; Molecular mapping; Pusa Basmati 1121
Year: 2018 PMID: 29629488 PMCID: PMC5890003 DOI: 10.1186/s12284-018-0213-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rice (N Y) ISSN: 1939-8425 Impact factor: 4.783
Fig. 1Lodging in the traditional Basmati rice variety, Type 3 at maturity due to tallness
Fig. 2Lineage of PB 1121 showing the contribution of several varieties including the traditional Basmati rice varieties Basmati 370 and Type 3. Values in parentheses are the year in which crossing was initiated (1966) and the year of release of the variety (2003)
Fig. 3a Field view of the plot of PB 1121 at ICAR-IARI, New Delhi, (b) Milled rice and cooked rice kernels of PB 1121
Grain and cooking quality characteristics of improved Basmati rice variety PB 1121 compared to Basmati 370, Taraori Basmati and Pusa Basmati 1
| Variety | Milling% | HRR% | KLBC (mm) | KBBC (mm) | KLAC (mm) | ER |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basmati 370 | 72.5 | 53.0 | 6.89 | 1.85 | 13.40 | 1.94 |
| Taraori Basmati | 69.0 | 49.9 | 7.15 | 1.78 | 13.97 | 1.95 |
| Pusa Basmati 1 | 67.0 | 48.5 | 7.38 | 1.80 | 14.75 | 2.00 |
| PB 1121 | 70.5 | 54.5 | 8.00 | 1.90 | 21.50 | 2.69 |
HRR-Head rice recovery, KLBC-Kernel length before cooking, KBBC - Kernel breadth before cooking, KLAC-Kernel length after cooking, ER-Elongation ratio (Source: Singh et al. 2002)
Fig. 4Duration and grain yield of PB 1121 as compared to Basmati 370, Taraori Basmati and Pusa Basmati 1; Year of release of the variety is indicated in the parentheses
Fig. 5Gradual improvement in grain and cooking quality of Basmati rice varieties: a journey of decades
Fig. 6Area (a) and yield (b) of Pusa Basmati 1121 compared to the totals for all Basmati rice
Fig. 7Trends in foreign exchange earnings through export of Basmati rice since the release of Pusa Basmati 1121 (Source: http://agriexchange.apeda.gov.in/indexp/reportlist.aspx)
Fig. 8Trend in Basmati export (volume and value) through export of Basmati rice in India, before and after the release of PB 1121
Mapping populations developed using PB 1121 for mapping and validation of QTLs governing various traits in rice
| S. No. | Trait(s) mapped | Mapping population (Population used) | QTLs mapped | Marker interval/ linked marker | Percent phenotypic variance (PVE %) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Mapping of QTLs for grain and cooking quality traits | ||||||
| 1. | Grain length | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM431-RM104 | 10.10 | Amarawathi et al. |
|
| RM11-RM505 | 7.40 | ||||
|
| RM505-RM336 | 5.70 | ||||
| 2. | Grain breadth | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM11-RM505 | 10.10 | |
|
| RM505-RM336 | 18.90 | ||||
| 3. | Length/ breadth ratio | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM11-RM505 | 10.00 | |
|
| RM505-RM336 | 21.90 | ||||
| 4. | Elongation ratio | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM1812-RM209 | 6.80 | |
| 5. | Amylose content | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM3-RM217 | 39.60 | |
| 6. | ASV | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM3-RM217 | 6.90 | |
| 7. | Aroma | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM5474-RM282 | 10.30 | |
|
| RM5633-RM273 | 6.10 | ||||
|
| RM223-RM80 | 18.90 | ||||
| 8. | Resistance to bakanae diseasea | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| RM9-RM11282 | 6.49 | Fiyaz et al. |
|
| RM10153-RM5336 | 24.70 | ||||
|
| RM10271-RM35 | 4.70 | ||||
| (b) Fine mapping of QTLs and allele mining | ||||||
| 9. | Aroma | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| CHR3_22-CHR3_24 | 11.00 | Singh et al. |
|
| CHR8_49-RM44 | 2.90 | ||||
| 10. | Grain length | PB 1121/Pusa 1342 (RILs) |
| CHR7_34-RM505 | 15.20 | Singh et al. |
|
| CHR1_1-RM431 | 10.80 | ||||
|
| CHR7_34-RM505 | 8.60 | ||||
|
| CHR7_34-RM505 | 8.60 | ||||
| 11. | Grain length | Sonasal/PB 1121 (RILs) | Novel InDel in | aks-GS3–12 | – | Anand et al. |
| (c) Validation of QTLs | ||||||
| 12. | Grain length | Sonasal/PB 1121 (F2) |
| SF28 | 32.50 | Anand et al. |
|
| SR17 | 7.90 | ||||
|
| RGS1 | 12.00 | ||||
|
| RGS2 | 6.30 | ||||
| 15. | Grain length | Sonasal/PB 1121 (F2) |
| RM505 | 5.40 | Anand et al. |
a PB 1121 is used as a susceptible parent
Fig. 9QTLs mapped for various traits in different chromosomes using PB 1121 as one parent in development of a mapping population
Fig. 10Important Basmati rice varieties and improved Basmati rice genotypes derived from PB 1121
Basmati rice varieties developed using PB 1121, along with characteristic features of the trait (genes incorporated) that has been improved
| S. No. | Name of the Basmati Rice Variety/ Genotype | Year of Release | Pedigree | Special attribute(s) | Area for which it is Recommended for Cultivation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Released varieties | |||||
| Pusa Basmati 6 | 2008 | Pusa Basmati 1/PB 1121 | Milled rice less than 4% chalky grains, cooked rice uniform in shape, strong aroma | Basmati growing areas of Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh | |
| Pusa Basmati 1509 | 2013 | Pusa 1301/PB 1121 | Semi-dwarf early maturing Basmati rice variety with a seed to seed maturity of 120 days with grain quality comparable to PB 1121 | Basmati growing areas of Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and Delhi (Singh et al. | |
| Pusa Basmati 1718 | 2017 | PB 1121/SPS 97// PB 1121*3 | A MAS derived bacterial blight resistant near-isogenic line of PB 1121 possessing two genes governing resistance to bacterial blight disease, | Basmati growing areas of Punjab, Haryana and Delhi (Singh et al. | |
| Improved PB 1121 genotypes | |||||
| Pusa 1883 | – | Pusa 1716/Pusa 1717 | A MAS derived blast resistant near-isogenic line of PB 1121 possessing two genes governing resistance to blast disease namely, | Not yet released. (Ellur et al. | |
| Pusa 1927 | – | PB 1121/PR114- | A MAS derived bacterial blight resistant near-isogenic line of PB 1121 possessing BB resistance gene, | Not yet released. (Ellur et al. | |
| Pusa 1734 | – | PB 1121/FL478/PB 1121*3 | A MAS derived near-isogenic line of PB 1121 possessing “ | Not yet released. (Babu et al. | |