| Literature DB >> 32211007 |
Ming Hao1,2, Lianquan Zhang1,2, Shunzong Ning2, Lin Huang2, Zhongwei Yuan2, Bihua Wu2, Zehong Yan2, Shoufen Dai2, Bo Jiang2, Youliang Zheng2, Dengcai Liu1,2.
Abstract
Breeding progress in most crops has relied heavily on the exploitation of variation within the species' primary gene pool, a process which is destined to fail once the supply of novel variants has been exhausted. Accessing a crop's secondary gene pool, as represented by its wild relatives, has the potential to greatly expand the supply of usable genetic variation. The crop in which this approach has been most strongly championed is bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), a species which is particularly tolerant of the introduction of chromosomal segments of exotic origin thanks to the genetic buffering afforded by its polyploid status. While the process of introgression can be in itself cumbersome, a larger problem is that linkage drag and/or imperfect complementation frequently impose a yield and/or quality penalty, which explains the reluctance of breeders to introduce such materials into their breeding populations. Thanks to the development of novel strategies to induce introgression and of genomic tools to facilitate the selection of desirable genotypes, introgression breeding is returning as a mainstream activity, at least in wheat. Accessing variation present in progenitor species has even been able to drive genetic advance in grain yield. The current resurgence of interest in introgression breeding can be expected to result in an increased deployment of exotic genes in commercial wheat cultivars.Entities:
Keywords: Triticeae; Triticum aestivum; alien introgression; marker; synthetic wheat
Year: 2020 PMID: 32211007 PMCID: PMC7067975 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.00252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Examples of compensating Robertsonian translocations generated by double monosomic method.
| Resistance to wheat spindle streak mosaic virus | 4VS⋅4DL | ||
| Increasing gluten strength | 1V#3S⋅1DL | ||
| Stem rust | T6AS⋅6V#3L | ||
| / | A set of RobTs involving 12 | ||
| Stem rust resistance | 3S | ||
| Resistance to streak mosaic virus | 7BS⋅7S#3L | ||
| Stem rust | 7J#1S⋅7DL | ||
| High Fe and Zn contents | 6E | ||
| Improving flour quality | 1AS.1EL | ||
| Rye | Stem rust | 2DS⋅2RL | |
| Rye | Powdery mildew | 6RS⋅6AL | |
| Barley | β-glucan CslF6; long spikes | A complete set of six RobTs | |
| Barley | Salt tolerance and β-glucan content | 7BS⋅7HL |
FIGURE 1The double monosomic method use to induce cRobTs. A euploid cultivar is crossed with a whole chromosome substitution line in which an exotic chromosome has replaced its wheat homeolog. The resulting F hybrid carries two chromosomes which remain as univalents at meiosis metaphase I, giving the opportunity for a joint breakage/fusion event at anaphase I to create a cRobT.
Examples of small translocations generated by manipulation with ph1b.
| 1U/1B; 1U/1D | |||
| Leaf rust | 7S/7A | ||
| Stem rust/ | 2S/2B | ||
| / | 2S/2B | ||
| Tan spot | 2S/2B | ||
| T6AS⋅6AL-6S | |||
| Powdery mildew | 2S | ||
| Removing | T1RS⋅1BL/1B; T1RS⋅1BL/1D | ||
| Removing | T1RS⋅1BL/1B | ||
| / | T2RS⋅2BL/2B; T2BS⋅2RL/2B | ||
| Removing | T1DS-1RS-1DS⋅1DL/1D | ||
| Leaf rust | T7DS⋅7DL-7EL/7A; T7DS⋅7DL-7EL/7D | ||
| Barley yellow dwarf virus | T7DS⋅7J?/T7DS⋅7DL-7S? | ||
| Wheat streak mosaic virus | T7BS⋅7S#3L/7B | ||
| / | 2E/2B | ||
| / | 4H | ||
| β | T7HL⋅7AS/7A; T7HL⋅7BS/7B; T7HL⋅7DS/7D | ||
| 1Ets#1S/1A | |||
| T6VS⋅6AL/6A | |||
| Wheat yellow mosaic virus | T4VS⋅4DL/4D | ||
| Stem rust | T6AS-6V#3L/6A |
FIGURE 2The introgression of a small fragment of Ha. villosa chromosome 6V into a distal site of wheat chromosome arm 6AS. Two independent introgression lines were inter-crossed: one carries the terminal portion of chromosome arm 6VS and the other a proximal segment, while both carry Pm21, which lies in the short common interstitial segment. As a result of a homologous recombination event in the F hybrid, segregants are generated which carry only the short interstitial segment [Figure redrawn from Lukaszewski and Cowger (2017)].
FIGURE 3The double top-cross (DTC) and two phase selection (2PS) strategies deployed to manage introgression into elite germplasm from an SHW. The DTC populations retain on average 12.5% of the nuclear genome of the SHW parent. The aim of the first selection phase, carried out in the F2 and F3 generations, is to eliminate serious agronomic defects, while that of the second phase (applied from the F4 generation onward) is to improve yield. Shumai 969 and Shumai 830 were both bred using this strategy.