| Literature DB >> 30890139 |
Hui Wang1,2, Shangshang Zhu1,2, Xiaojing Dang1,2, Erbao Liu1,2, Xiaoxiao Hu1,2, Moaz Salah Eltahawy1,2, Imdad Ullah Zaid1,2, Delin Hong3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Improving the gelatinization temperature (GT), gel consistency (GC) and amylose content (AC) for parental grain eating and cooking qualities (ECQs) are key factors for enhancing average grain ECQs for hybrid japonica rice.Entities:
Keywords: Amylose content; Gel consistency; Gelatinization temperature; Linkage disequilibrium,·Genome-wide association mapping; Oryza sativa; Phenotypic and genetic diversities
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30890139 PMCID: PMC6423859 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-019-0735-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Fig. 2Population structure analysis in 262 rice accessions. a Changes in the △k value. b) Posterior probability of 262 accessions belonging to five subpopulations calculated by STRUCRURE software. The colored subsections within each vertical bar indicate membership coefficient (Q) of the accession to different clusters. Identified subpopulations are SP1 (red color), SP2 (green color), SP3 (navy blue color), SP4 (yellow color), SP5 (purple color). c Neighbor-joining tree for the 262 accessions based on Nei’s genetic distance. d Principal components analysis (PCA) for 462 accessions and referance accessions genotyped with 262 SSR markers
Summary statistics of phenotypic performance of 462 rice accessions for GT, GC and AC in five environments
| Traitsa | Environments | Mean±SD b | Maximum | Minimum | CV (%)c | Kurtosis | Skewness | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GT (ASS, grade) | E1 | 4.65±1.83 | 7 | 1 | 39.35 | -0.87 | -0.59 | 95.0 |
| E2 | 4.45±1.62 | 7 | 1 | 36.4 | -0.48 | -0.59 | 92.7 | |
| E3 | 4.61±1.77 | 7 | 1 | 38.39 | -0.39 | -0.84 | 95.5 | |
| E4 | 3.95±1.76 | 7 | 1 | 44.56 | -1.12 | -0.58 | 94.9 | |
| E5 | 3.60±1.71 | 7 | 1 | 47.5 | -1.29 | -0.14 | 94.6 | |
| GC (mm) | E1 | 53.07±25.4 | 139 | 8 | 47.86 | 0.3 | 0.76 | 94.5 |
| E2 | 50.04±25.19 | 134 | 14 | 50.34 | 0.91 | 1.02 | 96.2 | |
| E3 | 46.09±25.22 | 134 | 15 | 54.72 | 1.12 | 1.1 | 96.0 | |
| E4 | 44.05±24.77 | 138 | 13 | 56.23 | 1.87 | 1.4 | 92.9 | |
| E5 | 49.5±25.06 | 137 | 15 | 50.63 | 1.02 | 1.05 | 90.7 | |
| AC (%) | E1 | 18.22±5.93 | 27.44 | 0.04 | 32.55 | 2.44 | -1.55 | 96.3 |
| E2 | 19.37±6.5 | 30.67 | 0.81 | 33.56 | 1.68 | -1.29 | 92.8 | |
| E3 | 17.64±5.61 | 28.62 | 0.65 | 31.8 | 2.61 | -1.58 | 99.7 | |
| E4 | 18.69±6.64 | 31.77 | 0.31 | 35.53 | 0.89 | -1.12 | 99.6 | |
| E5 | 19.36±5.96 | 29.69 | 0.28 | 30.79 | 3.31 | -1.79 | 99.8 |
aGT (gelatinization temperature) values based on ASS (alkali spreading score) from 1-7; GC gel consistency; AC amylose content; See Materials and methods for details of parameter calculations
bSD standard deviation
cCV Coefficient of variation
Fig. 1Graphical representation of different typical variety of rice showing the highest and the lowest values in gelatinization temperature which measured by the alkali spreading score (ASS) and gel consistency trait. a Rice of the lowest ASS named ‘Yuedao 70’. b The highest ASS named ‘Longdun 105’. c Summary statistics of gelatinization temperature of 462 rice accessions in five environments. GT values based on the ASS (1-7 grade). d The shortest length of gel consistent named ‘Haobuka’. e The longest length of gel consistent named ‘Hongnong 5’. f-g Summary statistics of gel consistency and amylose content of 462 rice accessions in five environments. Box plots span the 95th–fifth percentiles. Bar = 10mm
Pairwise FST and Nei’s genetic distance among the five subpopulations
| Subpopulation | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| 0.5307 | 0.5605 | 0.5200 | 0.5414 |
| 2 | 0.3796 |
| 0.3906 | 0.4876 | 0.6049 |
| 3 | 0.4130 | 0.2766 |
| 0.4254 | 0.6268 |
| 4 | 0.4305 | 0.3456 | 0.3100 |
| 0.5328 |
| 5 | 0.4356 | 0.3901 | 0.4236 | 0.4228 |
|
Nei’s genetic distance is above the diagonal, and the pairwise FST is below the diagonal. All of the FST values are significant (p<0.05)
Fig. 3Genetic diversity analysis for the five subpopulations. a Number of alleles. b Number of alleles/locus in the five subpopulations. c Genetic diversity and PIC value in the five subpopulations
Comparison of D′ values for pair-wise SSR loci in each subpopulation
| Cluster | No. of significant LDa | Ratiob (%) | Frequency of | Means | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| locus pairs | 0–0.2 | 0.2–0.4 | 0.4-0.6 | 0.6-0.8 | 0.8-1.0 | of | ||
| POP1 | 927 | 2.7 | 14 | 154 | 195 | 173 | 391 | 0.692 |
| POP2 | 1330 | 3.9 | 3 | 159 | 316 | 406 | 446 | 0.673 |
| POP3 | 1137 | 3.3 | 0 | 31 | 169 | 349 | 588 | 0.786 |
| POP4 | 1078 | 3.2 | 1 | 50 | 181 | 336 | 510 | 0.751 |
| POP5 | 833 | 2.4 | 0 | 24 | 153 | 207 | 449 | 0.787 |
| 5305 | ||||||||
aLD means linkage disequilibrium
bRatio between the number of significant LD locus pairs and total number of LD locus pairs
cD′ means standardized disequilibrium coefficients
Marker–trait associations with –LogP value ≥ 3.0, their equivalent false discovery rate (FDR), proportion of phenotypic variance explained (PVE), and the average allele effects (AAE) across five environments for GT (ASS), GC and AC traits
| Traits | No. | SSR marker | Chr. | position (bp)a | Environment | -LogP | FDR | PVE(%) | AAEb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GT | 1 | RM232 | 3 | 8409404-8410886 | E4 | 3.48 | 0.0022 | 9.74 | 0.80 |
| 2 | RM267 | 5 | 21881317-21881455 | E3 | 3.48 | 0.0023 | 7.04 | 0.66 | |
| 3 | RM264 | 8 | 27926632-27926652 | E1 | 3.60 | 0.0024 | 7.43 | 1.16 | |
| 4 | RM3600 | 9 | 17107752-17107843 | E2 | 4.92 | 0.0029 | 10.12 | 1.38 | |
| GC | 1 |
| 3 | 35020004-35020027 | E2 | 3.30 | 0.0042 | 7.46 | 16.60 |
| 2 |
| 6 | 30452023-30452067 | E4 | 3.20 | 0.0028 | 10.54 | 20.52 | |
| AC | 1 |
| 3 | 35020004-35020027 | E1 | 4.27 | 0.0022 | 8.83 | -3.57 |
| E2 | 3.66 | 0.0022 | 7.89 | -4.56 | |||||
| E3 | 3.22 | 0.0019 | 7.17 | -4.87 | |||||
| E5 | 3.17 | 0.0020 | 7.17 | -4.76 | |||||
| 2 |
| 6 | 30452023-30452067 | E2 | 3.08 | 0.0065 | 10.48 | -3.66 | |
| 3 | RM258 | 10 | 17570591-17570612 | E1 | 3.04 | 0.0043 | 5.69 | -5.28 | |
| 4 | RM6327 | 11 | 364257-364310 | E2 | 3.09 | 0.0043 | 12.87 | -2.66 | |
| E3 | 3.19 | 0.0038 | 11.39 | -2.75 |
Bold markers represent that they were associated with two traits
aThe estimated physical position (bp) was inferred from the Gremene (http://www.gramene.org/markers) and NCBI (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi)
bAverage positive allele effects of SSR loci associated significantly with GT and GC traits, average negative allele effects of SSR loci associated significantly with AC trait
Fig. 4Manhattan and quantile-quantile plots of GWAS studies for GT, GC and AC with mixed linear model (MLM) in the five environments. a GT. b GC. c AC
Top three favorable marker alleles on each locus detected GT, GC and AC across five environments and typical varieties carrying the allele
| Traits | No. | Locus-allele | Chr. | MAF | Environment | PEV | Typical carrier variety |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GT (grade) | 1 | RM232-155 | 3 | 0.071 | E4 | 0.63 | Feilaifeng |
| 2 | RM232-145 | 3 | 0.192 | E4 | 0.67 | Wanyedao | |
| 3 | RM232-150 | 3 | 0.279 | E4 | 0.03 | Laowusi | |
| 4 | RM267-95 | 5 | 0.086 | E3 | 1.11 | Xiangnuodao | |
| 5 | RM267-125 | 5 | 0.106 | E3 | 0.61 | Feilaifeng | |
| 6 | RM267-120 | 5 | 0.104 | E3 | 0.39 | Kuobanzhong | |
| 7 | RM3600-90 | 9 | 0.186 | E2 | 2.00 | Longdun105 | |
| 8 | RM3600-85 | 9 | 0.368 | E2 | 1.02 | Ligengqing | |
| 9 | RM3600-80 | 9 | 0.149 | E2 | 0.29 | Songjing12 | |
| 10 | RM264-195 | 8 | 0.128 | E1 | 0.97 | Shiluqing | |
| 11 | RM264-160 | 8 | 0.132 | E1 | 0.85 | Kunnong8 | |
| 12 | RM264-130 | 8 | 0.091 | E1 | 0.74 | Yebaidao | |
| GC (mm) | 1 | RM6712-95 | 3 | 0.190 | E2 | 13.12 | Dongnongjingnuo418 |
| 2 | RM6712-115 | 3 | 0.223 | E2 | 11.12 | Baikenuo | |
| 3 | RM5753-195 | 6 | 0.108 | E4 | 24.02 | Shenlenuo | |
| 4 | RM5753-115 | 6 | 0.071 | E4 | 28.57 | Hongnong5 | |
| 5 | RM5753-130 | 6 | 0.069 | E4 | 3.06 | Haonuopie | |
| AC (%) | 1 | RM6712-115 | 3 | 0.223 | E1 | -4.32 | Molingjing |
| E2 | -1.97 | Xudao3 | |||||
| E3 | -0.45 | Wujing15 | |||||
| E5 | -2.04 | Baoxintaihuqing | |||||
| 2 | RM6712-95 | 3 | 0.190 | E1 | -0.68 | Dongnongjingnuo418 | |
| E2 | -3.11 | Munian4 | |||||
| E3 | -1.67 | Hangzhounuo | |||||
| E5 | -1.24 | Munian4 | |||||
| 3 | RM5753-195 | 6 | 0.108 | E2 | -3.21 | Guozinuo | |
| 4 | RM5753-115 | 6 | 0.071 | E2 | -2.21 | Suyunuo | |
| 5 | RM5753-205 | 6 | 0.970 | E2 | -1.13 | Suzhouqing | |
| 6 | RM258-125 | 10 | 0.392 | E1 | -1.74 | Yue109 | |
| 7 | RM258-140 | 10 | 0.247 | E1 | -0.76 | Wandao68 | |
| 8 | RM258-135 | 10 | 0.307 | E1 | -0.70 | Shenlenuo | |
| 9 | RM6327-230 | 11 | 0.104 | E2 | -3.78 | Jinggunuo | |
| E3 | -0.85 | Hangzhounuo | |||||
| 10 | RM6327-175 | 11 | 0.149 | E2 | -2.53 | Baimangnuo | |
| E3 | -1.31 | Baimangnuo |
Note: Fo r GT and GC trait, alleles with positive phenotypic effect value (PEV) are defined favorable alleles, whereas alleles with negative phenotypic effect value are considered as favorable alleles for AC trait
The geographic distribution of accessions carrying favorable alleles (The source map was taken from http://pixelmap.amcharts.com/). a Geographic distribution and the relative frequencies of SSR marker RM3600 alleles. b Geographic distribution and the relative frequencies of SSR marker RM6327 alleles. The color in the pie charts indicates the marker alleles within each locus status and geographic provenance of the germplasm category
Excellent parental combinations predicted for GT, GC and AC trait improvement
| Traits | Parental combinations | No. of favorable alleles predicted | Total improvement predicted |
|---|---|---|---|
| GT (grade) | Yebaidao(2) × Ligengqing(2) | 4 | 4.8 |
| Yebaidao(2) × Shiluqing(2) | 4 | 4.8 | |
| Kunnong8(1) × Yebaidao(3) | 4 | 4.6 | |
| Yebaidao(2) × Sanbailitou(2) | 4 | 4.5 | |
| Yebaidao(3) × Suzhouqing(1) | 4 | 4.5 | |
| GC (mm) | Hongnong5(1) × Dongnongjingnuo418(1) | 2 | 41.69 |
| Dongnongjingnuo418(1) × Baikenuo(1) | 2 | 37.14 | |
| Hongnong5(1) × Baikenuo(1) | 2 | 36.69 | |
| Baikenuo(1) × Shenlenuo(1) | 2 | 35.14 | |
| Baikenuo(1) × Haonuopie(1) | 2 | 14.18 | |
| AC (%) | Baoxintaihuqing(2) × Yue109(2) | 4 | -9.07 |
| Baoxintaihuqing(3) × Jinggunuo(1) | 4 | -8.49 | |
| Baoxintaihuqing(4) × Dongnongjingnuo418(2) | 4 | -8.49 | |
| Baoxintaihuqing(3) × Hangzhounuo(2) | 4 | -8.49 | |
| Baoxintaihuqing(2) × Baimangnuo(2) | 4 | -8.09 |
Digit in parentheses of the second column is the locus number
Compared the SSR loci associated with GT, GC and AC in this study and QTLs for GT, GC and AC reported in the previous studies
| Traits | NO. | SSR marker | Chr. | Start position (bp)a | End position (bp)a | QTL reported in the previous studies | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start position (bp)b | End position (bp)b | References | ||||||
| GT | 1 | RM232 | 3 | 8,409,404 | 8,410,886 | |||
| 2 | RM267 | 5 | 21,881,317 | 21,881,455 | 26,848,154 | 28,906,633 | Temnykh et al. (2001) [62] | |
| 3 | RM264 | 8 | 27,926,632 | 27,926,652 | 6,779,215 | 20,733,138 | Septiningsih et al. (2003) [13] | |
| 4 | RM3600 | 9 | 17,107,752 | 17,107,843 | ||||
| GC | 1 | RM6712 | 3 | 35,020,004 | 35,020,027 | |||
| 2 | RM5753 | 6 | 30,452,023 | 30,452,067 | 2,686,204 | 4,897,779 | Lanceras et al. (2000) [19] | |
| AC | 1 | RM6712 | 3 | 35,020,004 | 35,020,027 | |||
| 2 | RM5753 | 6 | 30,452,023 | 30,452,067 | 30,822,884 | 3,459,750 | McCouch et al. (2002) [63] | |
| 3 | RM258 | 10 | 17,570,591 | 17,570,612 | ||||
| 4 | RM6327 | 11 | 364,257 | 364,310 | ||||
a,bThe SSR Marker and the QTL physical position (bp) was inferred from the Gremene (http://www.gramene.org/markers) and NCBI (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi) respectively