Dissection of the qTGW1.1 region into two tightly-linked minor QTLs having stable effects for grain weight in rice.

BMC Genet

State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology and Chinese National Center for Rice Improvement, China National Rice Research Institute, Hangzhou, 310006, China.

Published: June 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study focuses on mapping minor quantitative trait loci (QTLs) related to grain weight and size in rice, building on previous research that identified major QTLs.
  • Using near isogenic lines (NILs) derived from four selected BC2F10 plants, researchers analyzed the effects of two identified QTLs (qTGW1.1a and qTGW1.1b) across different environmental conditions, finding their impact on traits like 1000-grain weight, grain length, and grain width.
  • The results showed that qTGW1.1a, influenced by the ZS97 allele, primarily affects grain weight, while qTGW1.1b,

Article Abstract

Background: Most agronomical traits of crop species are complex traits controlled by multiple genes and affected by environmental factors. While considerable efforts have been made to fine-map and clone major quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for yield-related traits in rice, it is not until recently that the attention has been paid to minor QTLs. Following previous dissection of QTLs for grain weight and grain size in a 12-Mb interval on the long arm of chromosome 1 in rice, this study targeted at one putative QTL region for a more precise mapping and for analyzing the genotype-by-environment interaction of minor QTLs.

Results: Four BC2F10 plants of the indica rice cross ZS97///ZS97//ZS97/MY46 were selected. They carried overlapped heterozygous segments that jointly covered the entire putative region for qTGW1.1 detected previously. Four sets of near isogenic lines (NILs) were developed from selfing progenies of the four plants. Each NIL set consisted of 32 ZS97 homozygous lines and 32 MY46 homozygous lines that differed in the corresponding heterozygous region. They were grown in two locations having distinct ecological conditions and measured for 1000-grain weight, grain length and grain width. Two QTLs were separated in an 835.2-kb interval flanked by DNA markers Wn28447 and RM11569. They both showed consistent effects across the two environments. The qTGW1.1a located within the 120.4-kb interval Wn28447 - RM11543 significantly affect all the three traits with the enhancing allele derived from ZS97, showing a stronger influence on grain weight than on grain length and width. The qTGW1.1b located in the 521.8-kb interval RM11554 - RM11569 significantly affect grain weight and length with the enhancing allele derived from MY46, having a stronger influence on grain length than on grain weight. Consistent performance of the two QTLs was confirmed in a validation experiment using five NIL-F2 populations segregated for either qTGW1.1a or qTGW1.1b.

Conclusion: Separation of closely-linked QTLs having small effects is achievable in the absence of major-QTL segregation. Minor QTLs for complex traits could act consistently in diverse environments, offering the potential of pyramiding beneficial alleles of multiple minor QTLs through marker-assisted selection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4929766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12863-016-0410-5DOI Listing

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