AI Article Synopsis

  • Several genomic regions (QTLs and SNPs) from 'AC Proteus' have been identified that could aid in creating high-yield, high-protein soybean cultivars, overcoming the typical trade-off between protein content and seed yield.
  • Previous research found that 'AC Proteus' produced populations with high protein content without the expected drop in yield, leading to the evaluation of various RIL populations through QTL and bulk segregant analyses.
  • These analyses uncovered multiple genomic regions linked to high protein content, particularly on chromosomes 15, 20, 2, 17, and 18, which may facilitate the development of improved soybean varieties with better nutritional profiles.

Article Abstract

Key message: Several AC Proteus derived genomic regions (QTLs, SNPs) have been identified which may prove useful for further development of high yielding high protein cultivars and allele-specific marker developments. High seed protein content is a trait which is typically difficult to introgress into soybean without an accompanying reduction in seed yield. In a previous study, 'AC Proteus' was used as a high protein source and was found to produce populations that did not exhibit the typical association between high protein and low yield. Five high x low protein RIL populations and a high x high protein RIL population were evaluated by either quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis or bulk segregant analyses (BSA) following phenotyping in the field. QTL analysis in one population using SSR, DArT and DArTseq markers found two QTLs for seed protein content on chromosomes 15 and 20. The BSA analyses suggested multiple genomic regions are involved with high protein content across the five populations, including the two previously mentioned QTLs. In an alternative approach to identify high protein genes, pedigree analysis identified SNPs for which the allele associated with high protein was retained in seven high protein descendants of AC Proteus on chromosomes 2, 17 and 18. Aside from the two identified QTLs (five genomic regions in total considering the two with highly elevated test statistic, but below the statistical threshold and the one with epistatic interactions) which were some distance from Meta-QTL regions and which were also supported by our BSA analysis within five populations. These high protein regions may prove useful for further development of high yielding high protein cultivars.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6928212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-55862-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

high protein
44
high
16
protein content
16
protein
14
genomic regions
12
'ac proteus'
8
dart dartseq
8
dartseq markers
8
prove development
8
development high
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!