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Mol. Cells 2007; 24(1): 83-94

Published online January 1, 1970

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

Quantitative Trait Loci Associated with Functional Stay-Green SNU-SG1 in Rice

Soo-Cheul Yoo, Sung-Hwan Cho, Haitao Zhang, Hyo-Chung Paik, Chung-Hee Lee, Jinjie Li, Jeong-Hoon Yoo, Byun-Woo Lee, Hee-Jong Koh, Hak Soo Seo and Nam-Chon Paek

Abstract

During monocarpic senescence in higher plants, functional stay-green delays leaf yellowing, maintaining photosynthetic competence, whereas nonfunctional stay-green retains leaf greenness without sustaining photosynthetic activity. Thus, functional stay-green is considered a beneficial trait that can increase grain yield in cereal crops. A stay-green japonica rice ‘SNU-SG1’ had a good seed-setting rate and grain yield, indicating the presence of a functional stay-green genotype. SNU-SG1 was crossed with two regular cultivars to determine the inheritance mode and identify major QTLs conferring stay-green in SNU-SG1. For QTL analysis, linkage maps with 100 and 116 DNA marker loci were constructed using selective genotyping with F2 and RIL (recombinant inbred line) populations, respectively. Molecular marker-based QTL analyses with both populations revealed that the functional stay-green phenotype of SNU-SG1 is regulated by several major QTLs accounting for a large portion of the genetic variation. Three main-effect QTLs located on chromosomes 7 and 9 were detected in both populations and a number of epistatic-effect QTLs were also found. The amount of variation explained by several digenic interactions was larger than that explained by main-effect QTLs. Two main-effect QTLs on chromosome 9 can be considered the target loci that most influence the functional stay-green in SNU-SG1. The functional stay-green QTLs may help develop low-input high-yielding rice cultivars by QTL-marker-assisted breeding with SNU-SG1.

Keywords Epistasis; F2 Population; Functional Stay-Green; Recombinant Inbred Lines; QTL Mapping; Rice; Selective Genotyping; SNU-SG1.

Article

Research Article

Mol. Cells 2007; 24(1): 83-94

Published online August 31, 2007

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Quantitative Trait Loci Associated with Functional Stay-Green SNU-SG1 in Rice

Soo-Cheul Yoo, Sung-Hwan Cho, Haitao Zhang, Hyo-Chung Paik, Chung-Hee Lee, Jinjie Li, Jeong-Hoon Yoo, Byun-Woo Lee, Hee-Jong Koh, Hak Soo Seo and Nam-Chon Paek

Abstract

During monocarpic senescence in higher plants, functional stay-green delays leaf yellowing, maintaining photosynthetic competence, whereas nonfunctional stay-green retains leaf greenness without sustaining photosynthetic activity. Thus, functional stay-green is considered a beneficial trait that can increase grain yield in cereal crops. A stay-green japonica rice ‘SNU-SG1’ had a good seed-setting rate and grain yield, indicating the presence of a functional stay-green genotype. SNU-SG1 was crossed with two regular cultivars to determine the inheritance mode and identify major QTLs conferring stay-green in SNU-SG1. For QTL analysis, linkage maps with 100 and 116 DNA marker loci were constructed using selective genotyping with F2 and RIL (recombinant inbred line) populations, respectively. Molecular marker-based QTL analyses with both populations revealed that the functional stay-green phenotype of SNU-SG1 is regulated by several major QTLs accounting for a large portion of the genetic variation. Three main-effect QTLs located on chromosomes 7 and 9 were detected in both populations and a number of epistatic-effect QTLs were also found. The amount of variation explained by several digenic interactions was larger than that explained by main-effect QTLs. Two main-effect QTLs on chromosome 9 can be considered the target loci that most influence the functional stay-green in SNU-SG1. The functional stay-green QTLs may help develop low-input high-yielding rice cultivars by QTL-marker-assisted breeding with SNU-SG1.

Keywords: Epistasis, F2 Population, Functional Stay-Green, Recombinant Inbred Lines, QTL Mapping, Rice, Selective Genotyping, SNU-SG1.

Mol. Cells
Nov 30, 2023 Vol.46 No.11, pp. 655~725
COVER PICTURE
Kim et al. (pp. 710-724) demonstrated that a pathogen-derived Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum type III effector RipL delays flowering time and enhances susceptibility to bacterial infection in Arabidopsis thaliana. Shown is the RipL-expressing Arabidopsis plant, which displays general dampening of the transcriptional program during pathogen infection, grown in long-day conditions.

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