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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Development of a core SNP arrays based on the KASP method for molecular breeding of rice

TLDR
The core KASP arrays developed in this study were efficient and versatile for rice germplasm assessment, genetic diversity and population evaluation and are valuable for promoting SNP molecular breeding in rice.
Abstract
The development and utilization of genetic markers play a pivotal role in marker-assisted breeding of rice cultivars during pyramiding of valuable genes. Among molecular markers, SNPs have become the most promising due to their wide distribution within genomes and suitability for high -throughput automated genotyping. Although metadata of SNPs have been identified via next generation sequencing in rice, a large gap between the development of SNP markers and the application in breeding still exists. To promote the application of SNP markers based on the KASP (Kompetitive Allele-Specific PCR) method in rice breeding, a set of core SNP arrays was built via the screening of SNP databases and literature resources based on the KASP method. Five hundred and ninety six SNPs classified into eight subsets including quality control, indica-indica variation, highly polymorphic, functional genes, key genes targeting sites, gene cloned region, important trait associated and gap filling sites were chosen to design KASP primers and 565 out of them were successfully designed, and the assay design success rate was 94.8%. Finally, 467 out of the 565 successfully-designed SNPs can display diversity at the loci were used to develop a set of core SNP arrays. To evaluate the application value of the core SNP markers in rice breeding, 481 rice germplasms were genotyped with three functional KASP markers designed from the sequences of GBSSI, SSIIa, and Badh2 from the core SNP arrays for estimation of their grain quality performance. Eighteen rice lines, including Xiangwanxian 13, Basmati 370, Ruanhua A, and PR 33319–9–1-1-5-3-5-4-1, harbor all three favorable alleles. The core KASP arrays were also used for rice germplasm assessment, genetic diversity and population evaluation. Four hundred and eighty-one rice germplasms were divided into 3 groups: POP1, POP2 and POP3. POP1 and POP2 were indica rice subgroups consisting of 263 and 186 rice germplasms, respectively. POP3 was a japonica rice subgroup consisting of 32 rice germplasms. The average FST value for the three subgroups was 0.3501; the FST value of POP1 and POP3 was the largest (0.5482), while that of POP1 and POP2 was the smallest (0.0721). The results showed that the genetic distance between the japonica and indica rice subspecies was large, indicating that the core SNP markers were effective at discriminating the population structure of the germplasms. Finally, the core KASP arrays were used for association analysis with milled grain traits. A total of 31 KASP markers were significantly associated (P < 0.01) with ML and the LWR. Among the 31 markers, 13 were developed based on cloned genes or on identified loci related to yield traits. Notably, several KASP markers associated with grain quality were also found to be associated with brown planthopper resistance or green leafhopper resistance simultaneously. The core KASP arrays developed in our study were efficient and versatile for rice germplasm assessment, genetic diversity and population evaluation and are valuable for promoting SNP molecular breeding in rice. Our study demonstrated that useful assays combined with molecular breeding can be exploited for important economic trait improvement in rice breeding.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Strategy for Use of Rice Blast Resistance Genes in Rice Molecular Breeding

TL;DR: It was concluded that three main problems in the current breeding of rice blast resistance are availability of few R (resistance) genes that confer resistance to both seedling and panicle blast, the resistance effect of pyramided lines is not the result of a simple accumulation of resistance spectrum, and only a few R genes have been successfully used for molecular breeding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving rice salt tolerance by precision breeding in a new era.

TL;DR: Recent developments in the understanding of the mechanisms of salt tolerance and how state-of-the-art tools including targeted mutagenesis or base and prime editing can help in gene discovery and functional analysis as well as in transferring favorable alleles into elite breeding material to speed the breeding of salt-tolerant rice cultivars are summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

A rare Waxy allele coordinately improves rice eating and cooking quality and grain transparency

TL;DR: The results suggest that Wx mw is a promising allele to improve grain quality, especially ECQ and grain transparency of high‐yielding japonica cultivars, in rice breeding programs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A direct PCR–based SNP marker–assisted selection system (D-MAS) for different crops

TL;DR: A direct PCR–based medium-throughput SNP marker–assisted selection (D-MAS) system, which could be a simple, cheap, and robust standard operation procedure (SOP) of molecular breeding for different crops and get extensive use in most laboratory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and application of indica – japonica SNP assays using the Fluidigm platform for rice genetic analysis and molecular breeding

TL;DR: The results indicate that these subspecies-specific SNPs were present in wild rice prior to domestication and will serve as an efficient and quick tool for genetic analysis and molecular breeding in rice.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MEGA5: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis using Maximum Likelihood, Evolutionary Distance, and Maximum Parsimony Methods

TL;DR: The newest addition in MEGA5 is a collection of maximum likelihood (ML) analyses for inferring evolutionary trees, selecting best-fit substitution models, inferring ancestral states and sequences, and estimating evolutionary rates site-by-site.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inference of Population Structure Using Multilocus Genotype Data: Linked Loci and Correlated Allele Frequencies

TL;DR: Extensions to the method of Pritchard et al. for inferring population structure from multilocus genotype data are described and methods that allow for linkage between loci are developed, which allows identification of subtle population subdivisions that were not detectable using the existing method.
Journal ArticleDOI

TASSEL: software for association mapping of complex traits in diverse samples

TL;DR: TASSEL (Trait Analysis by aSSociation, Evolution and Linkage) implements general linear model and mixed linear model approaches for controlling population and family structure and allows for linkage disequilibrium statistics to be calculated and visualized graphically.
Journal ArticleDOI

PowerMarker: an integrated analysis environment for genetic marker analysis

TL;DR: PowerMarker delivers a data-driven, integrated analysis environment (IAE) for genetic data that accelerates the analysis lifecycle and enables users to maintain data integrity throughout the process.
Journal ArticleDOI

GS3, a major QTL for grain length and weight and minor QTL for grain width and thickness in rice, encodes a putative transmembrane protein

TL;DR: Analysis of a random subpopulation of 201 individuals from the BC3F2 progeny confirmed that the GS3 locus explained 80–90% of the variation for grain weight and length in this population, and this locus was resolved as a minor QTL for grain width and thickness.
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