The contribution of intersubspecific hybridization to the breeding of super-high-yielding japonica rice in northeast China.

Theor Appl Genet

Key Laboratory of Northeast Rice Biology and Breeding, Ministry of Agriculture, Rice Research Institute, Shenyang Agricultural University, Dongling Road 120, Shenyang, 110866, China.

Published: October 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Analysis of rice cultivars shows that since 1990, there has been increased genetic diversity and higher frequencies of indica alleles, which positively relate to spikelet numbers while negatively affecting panicle counts.
  • * Key agronomic genes showed variations; some were fixed in northern japonica rice, while others were eliminated, indicating the complex nature of breeding for both high yield and quality amidst varying genetic contributions.

Article Abstract

Hybridization between indica and japonica rice combined with utilization of ideal plant type has led to the development of high-yielding japonica rice in northern China. However, the contribution at the genomic level of intersubspecific hybridization to the increased yield of northern Chinese japonica rice is uncertain. In this study, we analyzed the genomic pedigree of descendants of hybridization between indica and japonica rice grown in northeastern China between 1963 and 2008. Simple sequence repeat markers indicated that since 1990 the genetic diversity among northern japonica cultivars was enriched. Genome-wide analysis with subspecies-specific indel and intron length polymorphism markers showed indica-allele frequencies were significantly increased in cultivars bred after 1990, and were significantly positively correlated with spikelet number per panicle and significantly negatively correlated with panicle number per plant. Among eight genes controlling agronomic traits, GN1a and GS3 were partially fixed in the genome of northern japonica cultivars. In contrast, Waxy and qSH1 were eliminated, whereas DEP1 and qSW5 were retained. Indica germplasm is an important contributor to the increased yield of northern japonica rice. Breeding for high yield and grain quality in combination is a complicated process and difficult to achieve when relying on only one or several functional genes, thus the selection expertise of the breeder remains critical.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00122-012-1901-zDOI Listing

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