| Literature DB >> 30938052 |
Wenzhu Guo1, Tong Lian2,3, Baobao Wang3, Jiantao Guan4, Dong Yuan5, Huan Wang3, Fardous Mohammad Safiul Azam3, Xing Wan6, Weixuan Wang3, Qiuju Liang3, Haiyang Wang3, Jinxing Tu1, Chunyi Zhang3, Ling Jiang3.
Abstract
As essential B vitamin for humans, folates accumulation in edible parts of crops, such as maize kernels, is of great importance for human health. But its breeding is always limited by the prohibitive cost of folate profiling. The molecular breeding is a more executable and efficient way for folate fortification, but is limited by the molecular knowledge of folate regulation. Here we report the genetic mapping of folate quantitative trait loci (QTLs) using a segregated population crossed by two maize lines, one high in folate (GEMS31) and the other low in folate (DAN3130). Two folate QTLs on chromosome 5 were obtained by the combination of F2 whole-exome sequencing and F3 kernel-folate profiling. These two QTLs had been confirmed by bulk segregant analysis using F6 pooled DNA and F7 kernel-folate profiling, and were overlapped with QTLs identified by another segregated population. These two QTLs contributed 41.6% of phenotypic variation of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate, the most abundant storage form among folate derivatives in dry maize grains, in the GEMS31×DAN3130 population. Their fine mapping and functional analysis will reveal details of folate metabolism, and provide a basis for marker-assisted breeding aimed at the enrichment of folates in maize kernels.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30938052 DOI: 10.1111/jipb.12811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Integr Plant Biol ISSN: 1672-9072 Impact factor: 7.061