| Literature DB >> 33655424 |
Huaiqing Hao1, Zhigang Li2, Chuanyuan Leng2, Cheng Lu2,3, Hong Luo2, Yuanming Liu2,3, Xiaoyuan Wu2, Zhiquan Liu2, Li Shang2, Hai-Chun Jing4,5,6.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: The importance and potential of the multi-purpose crop sorghum in global food security have not yet been fully exploited, and the integration of the state-of-art genomics and high-throughput technologies into breeding practice is required. Sorghum, a historically vital staple food source and currently the fifth most important major cereal, is emerging as a crop with diverse end-uses as food, feed, fuel and forage and a model for functional genetics and genomics of tropical grasses. Rapid development in high-throughput experimental and data processing technologies has significantly speeded up sorghum genomic researches in the past few years. The genomes of three sorghum lines are available, thousands of genetic stocks accessible and various genetic populations, including NAM, MAGIC, and mutagenised populations released. Functional and comparative genomics have elucidated key genetic loci and genes controlling agronomical and adaptive traits. However, the knowledge gained has far away from being translated into real breeding practices. We argue that the way forward is to take a genome-based approach for tailored designing of sorghum as a multi-functional crop combining excellent agricultural traits for various end uses. In this review, we update the new concepts and innovation systems in crop breeding and summarise recent advances in sorghum genomic researches, especially the genome-wide dissection of variations in genes and alleles for agronomically important traits. Future directions and opportunities for sorghum breeding are highlighted to stimulate discussion amongst sorghum academic and industrial communities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33655424 PMCID: PMC7924314 DOI: 10.1007/s00122-021-03789-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Appl Genet ISSN: 0040-5752 Impact factor: 5.574
Fig. 1A diagram illustrating the remarkable feature of sorghum as a multiple-purpose crop. Following domestication which changes the traits of domestication syndrome (e.g. seed shattering and gigantism), sorghum is further improved and diversified into various end uses through breeding selection. It can be used not only for forage, food, bioenergy and broom, but also for bioremediation of contaminated cropland. The utilisation of sorghum varies greatly amongst different regions of the word. Generally, it is mainly used for food in developing countries and for feed in developed countries
Fig. 2Concepts of the functional module and molecular module. a A diagram deciphering the decision-making functional module in λ phage. This is the first well examined and best understood system of MM. After the phage invades the host cell, the decision-making module determines whether it enters a lysogenic or lytic state in response to physiological environmental signals. Two genes (cI, cro) and three promoters (pR, pL, and pRM) are involved in this regulatory process. CI acts as a regulator of lysogenic state, while Cro protein is the key regulator of lytic state b. A schematic diagram deciphering designer’s breeding by molecular modules (MMs), which consists of three major aspects (modified from Xue et al. (2013)). 1) Mining the functional MMs controlling complex traits, including high yield, superior quality, yield stability and high nutrient efficiency, and analysis of the gene regulatory network and elite allelic variation. 2) Revealing the effects of multi-molecular system coupling and interactions by a multi-module coupling assembly MMs design and breeding innovation system. 3) Achieving the optimal coupling assembly of excellent traits and design breeding of elite varieties.
Major QTL/genes for important agronomical and adaptive traits in sorghum
| Trait | Quantitative trait locus (gene) | Gene ID | Phenotype | Encoding protein | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grain yield | Seed shattering | YABBY transcription factor | Lin et al. ( | ||
| Seed shattering | WRKY transcription factor | Tang et al. ( | |||
| Grain weight | Expressed protein | Han et al. ( | |||
| Unknown | Grain size | Similar to putative fibre protein Fb34 | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Unknown | Grain size | Similar to H0801D08.10 protein | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Seed number | Ent-kaurene synthase | Zhao et al. ( | |||
| Grain number per panicle | TCP (Teosinte branched/Cycloidea/PCF) transcription factor | Jiao et al. ( | |||
| Grain number per panicle | Lipoxygenase | Gladman et al. ( | |||
| Grain number per panicle | ω-3 Fatty acid desaturase | Dampanaboina et al. ( | |||
| Grain quality | Unknown | Seed protein | α-Kafirin protein | Wu et al. ( | |
| Unknown | Seed protein | β-Kafirin protein | Chamba et al. ( | ||
| Unknown | Seed protein | γ-Kafirin protein | de Freitas et al. ( | ||
| Unknown | Seed protein | δ-Kafirin protein | Izquierdo and Godwin ( | ||
| Endosperm texture | Granule-bound ADP-glucose-glucosyl transferase | McIntyre et al. ( | |||
| Fat and protein content | Alpha-amylase debranching enzyme | Rhodes et al. ( | |||
| Crude fat | Diacylglyceroal O-acyltransferase 1 | Boyles et al. ( | |||
| Testa | WD40 protein | Wu et al. ( | |||
| Pericarp color | MYB domain protein | Boddu et al. ( | |||
| Flowering and height | Maturity | Pseudoresponse regulator protein 37 | Murphy et al. ( | ||
| Maturity | Phytochrome B | Childs et al. ( | |||
| Maturity | CCT-domain protein | Murphy et al. ( | |||
| Maturity | Sugar transporter | Upadhyaya et al. ( | |||
| Maturity | Flowering regulator | Upadhyaya et al. ( | |||
| Maturity | Flowering-time protein | Upadhyaya et al. ( | |||
| Plant height | Membrane protein | Hilley et al. ( | |||
| Plant height | Protein kinase | Hilley et al. ( | |||
| Plant height | Auxin efflux transporter | Multani et al. ( | |||
| Plant height | Ethylene responsive transcription factor | Girma et al. ( | |||
| Brown midrib and stem texture | Brown midrib | 4-Coumarate: coenzyme A ligase | Saballos et al. ( | ||
| Brown midrib | Cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase | Saballos et al. ( | |||
| Brown midrib | Caffeic | Sattler et al. ( | |||
| Dry stem and midrib | NAC transcription factor | Zhang et al. ( | |||
| Sugar accumulation | Tonoplast sugar transporters | Bihmidine et al. ( | |||
| Sugar accumulation | Tonoplast sugar transporters | Bihmidine et al. ( | |||
| Sugar accumulation | Vacuolar invertase | McKinley et al. ( | |||
| Sugar accumulation | Sugar transporters | Mizuno et al. ( | |||
| Sugar accumulation | Sugar transporters | Mizuno et al. ( | |||
| Tillering | Tillering | Transcription factor | Kebrom et al. ( | ||
| Cytoplasmic male sterility | Fertility | Pentatricopeptide repeat protein | Klein et al. ( | ||
| Fertility | Pentatricopeptide repeat protein | Madugula et al. ( | |||
| Fertility | Pentatricopeptide repeat protein | Praveen et al. ( | |||
| Stress tolerance | Aluminium tolerance and P deficiency | Multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) transporter | Magalhaes et al. ( | ||
| Waxy bloom | Long chain acyl coA oxidase | Burow et al. ( | |||
| Unknown | Anthracnose resistance | F-box domain | Cuevas et al. ( | ||
| Grain mould resistance | Putative R2R3 MYB transcription factor | Nida et al. ( | |||
| Grain mould resistance | Putative R2R3 MYB transcription factor | Nida et al. ( | |||
| Shoot fly resistance | Similar to Glossy15 | Satish et al. ( | |||
| Shoot fly resistance | NBS-LRR protein | Satish et al. ( | |||
| Shoot fly resistance | NAC domain protein NAC1 | Satish et al. ( | |||
| Sorgoleone | Alkylresorcinol synthases | Cook et al. ( | |||
| Sorgoleone | Alkylresorcinol synthases | Cook et al. ( | |||
| Sorgoleone | O-Methyltransferase | Baerson et al. ( | |||
| Striga | Sulphotransferase | Gobena et al. ( |
Fig. 3Tailor design of super sorghum with important genes controlling the complex traits. These genes have been previously reported to be associated with grain yield and quality, fertility, plant height and maturity, juicy and sugar accumulation, tillering, brown midrib, and stress resistance. On the basis of increasing resilience to stress tolerance, super sorghum for various end uses could be accurately designed by pyramiding the super alleles of important genes
Fig. 4Breeding scheme for sorghum improvement using the state-of-the-art genomics-based breeding strategies. The breeding programme consists of four key components. Part I: Diagnosis of changes in genetic diversity during domestication and diversification; Part II: Discovery and characterisation of genetic and genomic variation; Part III: Selection of pre-breeding materials through genome selection; Part IV: Genomics-assistant introgression and improvement in elite varieties. See texts for details