25 research outputs found
Exploitation of Tolerance of Wheat Kernel Weight and Shape-Related Traits from Aegilops tauschii under Heat and Combined Heat-Drought Stresses
Kernel weight and shape-related traits are inherited stably and increase wheat yield. Narrow genetic diversity limits the progress of wheat breeding. Here, we evaluated kernel weight and shape-related traits and applied genome-wide association analysis to a panel of wheat multiple synthetic derivative (MSD) lines. The MSD lines harbored genomic fragments from Aegilops tauschii. These materials were grown under optimum conditions in Japan, as well as under heat and combined heat–drought conditions in Sudan. We aimed to explore useful QTLs for kernel weight and shape-related traits under stress conditions. These can be useful for enhancing yield under stress conditions. MSD lines possessed remarkable genetic variation for all traits under all conditions, and some lines showed better performance than the background parent Norin 61. We identified 82 marker trait associations (MTAs) under the three conditions; most of them originated from the D genome. All of the favorable alleles originated from Ae. tauschii. For the first time, we identified markers on chromosome 5D associated with a candidate gene encoding a RING-type E3 ubiquitin–protein ligase and expected to have a role in regulating wheat seed size. Our study provides important knowledge for the improvement of wheat yield under optimum and stress conditions. The results emphasize the importance of Ae. tauschii as a gene reservoir for wheat breeding
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Influence of Cold-Hardening and Soil Matric Potential on Resistance to Speckled Snow Mold in Wheat
The influence of soil matric potential, cold-hardening temperature, and duration on resistance to speckled snow mold caused by Typhula ishikariensis in wheat was investigated. Six winter wheat lines were subjected to cold-hardening temperatures of 2 or 4°C for 1, 2, 3, or 4 weeks with soil matric potential of –0.1 or –0.01 MPa. Plants were inoculated with T. ishikariensis after cold-hardening, incubated at 10°C for 25 days in the dark, and then evaluated for regrowth. Overall recovery from snow mold was least when plants were hardened at 2°C for 1 week at –0.01 MPa and greatest when hardened at 4°C for 4 weeks at –0.1 MPa. Survival of plants following snow mold was greater when plants were cold-hardened at 4 than at 2°C and at –0.1 than –0.01 MPa soil matric potential. The greatest difference in survival among lines and correlation with field observations occurred when plants were hardened at 4°C at –0.1 MPa matric potential for 3 weeks. Understanding the influence of temperature and soil matric potential during cold-hardening on speckled snow mold resistance will be useful to breeding programs developing snow-mold-resistant cultivars under controlled environment conditions