10 research outputs found

    Identification of genomic loci governing pericarp colour through GWAS in rice (Oryza sativa L.)

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    Rice pericarp colour is one of the nutritional traits that is now gaining attention worldwide. In the present investigation, genome-wide association GWAS) was performed to identify loci governing pericarp colour in rice. A set of 1,349,269 SNPs and precise phenotyping across 325 diverse accessions of rice were used for the GWAS. The accessions belong to five rice isozyme classification groups viz., indica, japonica, aromatic, aus, and admix. The GWAS identified two significant loci gPC5-1and gPC7-1 on chromosomes, 5 and 7, respectively, associated with the pericarp colour in rice. The SNPs on chromosome 7 co-localized with the functionally characterized Os07g0211500 (Rc gene) known to control pericarp colour and Os07g0214900 which is similar to the Chalcone synthase 2(OsCHS2) gene involved in flavonoid synthesis pathway. Linkage disequilibrium analysis across 0.25 Mbp upstream and downstream of these markers suggested three strong linkage blocks on chromosome 7. More interestingly, the novel locus identified on chromosome 5 gPC5-1 does not harbor any homolog of previously reported genes. Therefore, the locus can serve as a basis for identifying a new gene for rice pericarp colour. The results presented here will be helpful to understand the genetic regulation of pericarp colour and for genomic-assisted breeding in rice

    Deciphering Haplotypic Variation and Gene Expression Dynamics Associated with Nutritional and Cooking Quality in Rice

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    Nutritional quality improvement of rice is the key to ensure global food security. Consequently, enormous efforts have been made to develop genomics and transcriptomics resources for rice. The available omics resources along with the molecular understanding of trait development can be utilized for efficient exploration of genetic resources for breeding programs. In the present study, 80 genes known to regulate the nutritional and cooking quality of rice were extensively studied to understand the haplotypic variability and gene expression dynamics. The haplotypic variability of selected genes were defined using whole-genome re-sequencing data of ~4700 diverse genotypes. The analytical workflow identified 133 deleterious single-nucleotide polymorphisms, which are predicted to affect the gene function. Furthermore, 788 haplotype groups were defined for 80 genes, and the distribution and evolution of these haplotype groups in rice were described. The nucleotide diversity for the selected genes was significantly reduced in cultivated rice as compared with that in wild rice. The utility of the approach was successfully demonstrated by revealing the haplotypic association of chalk5 gene with the varying degree of grain chalkiness. The gene expression atlas was developed for these genes by analyzing RNA-Seq transcriptome profiling data from 102 independent sequence libraries. Subsequently, weighted gene co-expression meta-analyses of 11,726 publicly available RNAseq libraries identified 19 genes as the hub of interactions. The comprehensive analyses of genetic polymorphisms, allelic distribution, and gene expression profiling of key quality traits will help in exploring the most desired haplotype for grain quality improvement. Similarly, the information provided here will be helpful to understand the molecular mechanism involved in the development of nutritional and cooking quality traits in rice

    Genomic Landscape Highlights Molecular Mechanisms Involved in Silicate Solubilization, Stress Tolerance, and Potential Growth-Promoting Activity of Bacterium Enterobacter sp. LR6

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    Silicon (Si) is gaining widespread attention due to its prophylactic activity to protect plants under stress conditions. Despite Si’s abundance in the earth’s crust, most soils do not have enough soluble Si for plants to absorb. In the present study, a silicate-solubilizing bacterium, Enterobacter sp. LR6, was isolated from the rhizospheric soil of rice and subsequently characterized through whole-genome sequencing. The size of the LR6 genome is 5.2 Mb with a GC content of 54.9% and 5182 protein-coding genes. In taxogenomic terms, it is similar to E. hormaechei subsp. xiangfangensis based on average nucleotide identity (ANI) and digital DNA–DNA hybridization (dDDH). LR6 genomic data provided insight into potential genes involved in stress response, secondary metabolite production, and growth promotion. The LR6 genome contains two aquaporins, of which the aquaglyceroporin (GlpF) is responsible for the uptake of metalloids including arsenic (As) and antimony (Sb). The yeast survivability assay confirmed the metalloid transport activity of GlpF. As a biofertilizer, LR6 isolate has a great deal of tolerance to high temperatures (45 °C), salinity (7%), and acidic environments (pH 9). Most importantly, the present study provides an understanding of plant-growth-promoting activity of the silicate-solubilizing bacterium, its adaptation to various stresses, and its uptake of different metalloids including As, Ge, and Si

    Pinpointing Genomic Regions and Candidate Genes Associated with Seed Oil and Protein Content in Soybean through an Integrative Transcriptomic and QTL Meta-Analysis

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    Soybean with enriched nutrients has emerged as a prominent source of edible oil and protein. In the present study, a meta-analysis was performed by integrating quantitative trait loci (QTLs) information, region-specific association and transcriptomic analysis. Analysis of about a thousand QTLs previously identified in soybean helped to pinpoint 14 meta-QTLs for oil and 16 meta-QTLs for protein content. Similarly, region-specific association analysis using whole genome re-sequenced data was performed for the most promising meta-QTL on chromosomes 6 and 20. Only 94 out of 468 genes related to fatty acid and protein metabolic pathways identified within the meta-QTL region were found to be expressed in seeds. Allele mining and haplotyping of these selected genes were performed using whole genome resequencing data. Interestingly, a significant haplotypic association of some genes with oil and protein content was observed, for instance, in the case of FAD2-1B gene, an average seed oil content of 20.22% for haplotype 1 compared to 15.52% for haplotype 5 was observed. In addition, the mutation S86F in the FAD2-1B gene produces a destabilizing effect of (ΔΔG Stability) −0.31 kcal/mol. Transcriptomic analysis revealed the tissue-specific expression of candidate genes. Based on their higher expression in seed developmental stages, genes such as sugar transporter, fatty acid desaturase (FAD), lipid transporter, major facilitator protein and amino acid transporter can be targeted for functional validation. The approach and information generated in the present study will be helpful in the map-based cloning of regulatory genes, as well as for marker-assisted breeding in soybean

    Pinpointing Genomic Regions and Candidate Genes Associated with Seed Oil and Protein Content in Soybean through an Integrative Transcriptomic and QTL Meta-Analysis

    No full text
    Soybean with enriched nutrients has emerged as a prominent source of edible oil and protein. In the present study, a meta-analysis was performed by integrating quantitative trait loci (QTLs) information, region-specific association and transcriptomic analysis. Analysis of about a thousand QTLs previously identified in soybean helped to pinpoint 14 meta-QTLs for oil and 16 meta-QTLs for protein content. Similarly, region-specific association analysis using whole genome re-sequenced data was performed for the most promising meta-QTL on chromosomes 6 and 20. Only 94 out of 468 genes related to fatty acid and protein metabolic pathways identified within the meta-QTL region were found to be expressed in seeds. Allele mining and haplotyping of these selected genes were performed using whole genome resequencing data. Interestingly, a significant haplotypic association of some genes with oil and protein content was observed, for instance, in the case of FAD2-1B gene, an average seed oil content of 20.22% for haplotype 1 compared to 15.52% for haplotype 5 was observed. In addition, the mutation S86F in the FAD2-1B gene produces a destabilizing effect of (ΔΔG Stability) −0.31 kcal/mol. Transcriptomic analysis revealed the tissue-specific expression of candidate genes. Based on their higher expression in seed developmental stages, genes such as sugar transporter, fatty acid desaturase (FAD), lipid transporter, major facilitator protein and amino acid transporter can be targeted for functional validation. The approach and information generated in the present study will be helpful in the map-based cloning of regulatory genes, as well as for marker-assisted breeding in soybean

    Expanding Avenue of Fast Neutron Mediated Mutagenesis for Crop Improvement

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    Fast neutron (FN) radiation mediated mutagenesis is a unique approach among the several induced mutagenesis methods being used in plant science in terms of impacted mutations. The FN mutagenesis usually creates deletions from few bases to several million bases (Mb). A library of random deletion generated using FN mutagenesis lines can provide indispensable resources for the reverse genetic approaches. In this review, information from several efforts made using FN mutagenesis has been compiled to understand the type of induced mutations, frequency, and genetic stability. Concerns regarding the utilization of FN mutagenesis technique for a plant with different level of ploidy and genome complexity are discussed. We have highlighted the utility of next-generation sequencing techniques that can be efficiently utilized for the characterization of mutant lines as well as for the mapping of causal mutations. Pros and cons of mapping by mutation (MutMap), mutant chromosome sequencing (MutChromSeq), exon capture, whole genome sequencing, MutRen-Seq, and different tilling approaches that can be used for the detection of FN-induced mutation has also been discussed. Genomic resources developed using the FN mutagenesis have been catalogued wooing to meaningful utilization of the available resources. The information provided here will be helpful for the efficient exploration for the crop improvement programs and for better understanding of genetic regulations

    Diversity of Sodium Transporter HKT1;5 in Genus Oryza

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    Asian cultivated rice shows allelic variation in sodium transporter, OsHKT1;5, correlating with shoot sodium exclusion (salinity tolerance). These changes map to intra/extracellularly-oriented loops that occur between four transmembrane-P loop-transmembrane (MPM) motifs in OsHKT1;5. HKT1;5 sequences from more recently evolved Oryza species (O. sativa/O. officinalis complex species) contain two expansions that involve two intracellularly oriented loops/helical regions between MPM domains, potentially governing transport characteristics, while more ancestral HKT1;5 sequences have shorter intracellular loops. We compared homology models for homoeologous OcHKT1;5-K and OcHKT1;5-L from halophytic O. coarctata to identify complementary amino acid residues in OcHKT1;5-L that potentially enhance affinity for Na+. Using haplotyping, we showed that Asian cultivated rice accessions only have a fraction of HKT1;5 diversity available in progenitor wild rice species (O. nivara and O. rufipogon). Progenitor HKT1;5 haplotypes can thus be used as novel potential donors for enhancing cultivated rice salinity tolerance. Within Asian rice accessions, 10 non-synonymous HKT1;5 haplotypic groups occur. More HKT1;5 haplotypic diversities occur in cultivated indica gene pool compared to japonica. Predominant Haplotypes 2 and 10 occur in mutually exclusive japonica and indica groups, corresponding to haplotypes in O. sativa salt-sensitive and salt-tolerant landraces, respectively. This distinct haplotype partitioning may have originated in separate ancestral gene pools of indica and japonica, or from different haplotypes selected during domestication. Predominance of specific HKT1;5 haplotypes within the 3 000 rice dataset may relate to eco-physiological fitness in specific geo-climatic and/or edaphic contexts
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