8 research outputs found

    Grain dormancy QTL identified in a doubled haploid barley population derived from two non-dormant parents

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    Grain dormancy provides protection against pre-harvest sprouting (PHS) in cereals. Composite interval mapping and association analyses were performed to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) contributing grain dormancy in a doubled haploid (DH) barley population (ND24260 9 Flagship) consisting of 321 lines genotyped with DArT markers. Harvest-ripe grain collected from three field experimentswas germinated over a 7-day period to determine a weighted germination index for each line. DH lines were identified; however, both parental lines were nondormant and displayed rapid germination within the first two days of testing. Genetic analysis identified two QTL on chromosome 5H that were expressed consistently in each of the three environments. One QTL (donated by Flagship) was located close to the centromeric region of chromosome 5H (qSDFlag),accounting for up to 15% of the phenotypic variation. A second QTL with a larger effect (from ND24260) was detected on chromosome 5HL (qSDND), accounting for up to 35% of the phenotypic variation. qSDFlag and qSDND displayed an epistatic interaction and DH lines that had the highest levels of grain dormancy carried both genes. We demonstrate that qSDND in the ND24260 9 Flagship DH population is positioned proximal and independent to the well-characterised SD2 region that is associated with both high levels of dormancy and inferior malt quality. This indicates that it should be possible to develop cultivars that combine acceptable malting quality and adequate levels of grain dormancy for protection against PHS by utilizing these alternate QTL

    Exploring wheat landraces for rust resistance using a single marker scan

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    Marker-trait associations identified in diverse germplasm can be exploited in crop improvement programs. An attempt to establish such associations was made by evaluating 205 wheat landraces for stripe rust, leaf rust and stem rust responses in the field over three crop seasons. Diversity arrays technology was used to genotype the landraces and associations were identified using a single-marker scan. Sixty-eight markers were significantly associated with rust resistance. Several significantly associated loci coincided with the presence of known major genes or QTL for rust resistance. In contrast, many marker-rust response associations identified in this analysis for each of the three rust diseases uncovered new loci. Dual associations; stripe rust-leaf rust (1AL, 2BS, 2BL, 3DL, 5BS, 6BS and 7DL), leaf rust-stem rust (5BL) and stripe rust-stem rust (4BL and 6AS) resistance were also observed. These associations could enable a cost-effective targeted mapping of dual rust resistance. Some marker-trait associations identified in this study have been validated through genetic analyses and formal naming of resistance loci

    Breeding Cold-Tolerant Crops

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    Low-temperature stress is considered as the major abiotic constraint limiting plant\u2019s growth and the potential land cultivation. Crop adaptation to limiting temperature is thus an important breeding objective because it determines yield stability in environment-friendly cultivation practices. Conventional breeding methods had limited success in improving the cold tolerance of important crop plants because of the complexity of stress tolerance traits, low genetic variance, and lack of efficient selection criteria. The knowledge of physiology, of genetics, and of the DNA technology has improved substantially nowadays, and these advancements will allow the breeder to predict the breeding value of best genotypes by using physiology, genetics, and molecular information. The perspective for selecting more effectively cold-tolerant crops will involve efficient genotyping, reliable phenotyping and envirotyping, and adequate statistical models

    Data synthesis for crop variety evaluation. A review

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