AI Article Synopsis

  • - Wheat is a crucial staple food globally, but its production has hit a yield plateau, raising concerns about food security; cutting-edge technologies like genomics may help enhance crop improvement.
  • - The study aimed to examine genetic diversity and phenological responses in 249 winter wheat lines from various regions, utilizing a 35K Axiom array for genetic analysis, which revealed significant diversity and distinct subpopulations related to geographical origins.
  • - Results showed significant variation in phenological traits under different environmental conditions, with GWAS analysis identifying 30 marker-trait associations, particularly on chromosome 2D, indicating potential genetic targets for improving wheat phenology.

Article Abstract

Wheat is a staple food in many areas around the World. In the 20th century, breeders and scientists were able to boost wheat yield considerably. However, a yield plateau has become a concern and is threatening food security. Investments in cutting-edge technologies, including genomics and precision phenology measurements, can provide valuable tools to drive crop improvement. The objectives of this study were to (i) investigate the genetic diversity in a set of winter wheat lines, (ii) characterize their phenological response under different vernalization and photoperiod conditions, and (iii) identify effective markers associated with the phenological traits. A total of 249 adapted genotypes of different geographical origin were genotyped using the 35K Axiom Wheat Breeder's Array. A total of 11,476 SNPs were used for genetic analysis. The set showed an average polymorphism information content of 0.37 and a genetic diversity of 0.43. A population structure analysis revealed three distinct subpopulations mainly related to their geographical origin (Europe, North America, and Western Asia). The lines of CGIAR origin showed the largest diversity and the lowest genetic distance to all other subpopulations. The phenology of the set was studied under controlled conditions using four combinations of long (19 h light) and short photoperiod (13 h light) and long vernalization (49 days at 5 °C) and no vernalization. With this, phenological traits such as earliness per se (Eps), relative response to vernalization (RRV), and relative response to photoperiod (RRP) were calculated. The phenotypic variation of growing degree days was significant in all phenology combinations. RRV ranged from 0 to 0.56, while RRP was higher with an overall average of 0.25. The GWAS analysis detected 30 marker-trait associations linked to five phenological traits. The highest significant marker was detected on chromosome 2D with a value of -log10() = 11.69. Only four loci known to regulate flowering exceeded the Bonferroni correction threshold of -log10() > 5.1. These results outline a solid foundation to address global food security and offer tremendous opportunities for advancing crop improvement strategies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10708061PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12234053DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

genetic diversity
12
phenological traits
12
north america
8
america western
8
western asia
8
food security
8
crop improvement
8
response vernalization
8
geographical origin
8
relative response
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!