info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
Identification and characterization of Rht25, a locus on chromosome arm 6AS affecting wheat plant height, heading time, and spike development
Fecha
2018Autor
Youngjun Mo
Vanzetti, Leonardo Sebastian
Hale, Iago
Spagnolo, Emiliano J.
Guidobaldi, Fabio
Al-Oboudi, Jassim
Odle, Natalie
Pearce, Stephen
Helguera, Marcelo
Dubcovsky, Jorge
Resumen
Understanding genes regulating wheat plant height is important to optimize harvest index and maximize grain yield.
In modern wheat varieties grown under high-input conditions, the gibberellin-insensitive semi-dwarfing alleles Rht-B1b and
Rht-D1b have been used extensively to confer lodging tolerance and improve harvest index. However, negative pleiotropic
effects of these alleles (e.g., poor seedling emergence and reduced biomass) can cause yield losses in hot and dry environments.
As part of current efforts to diversify the dwarfing alleles used in wheat breeding, we identified a quantitative trait
locus (QHt.ucw-6AS) affecting plant height in the proximal region of chromosome arm 6AS (< 0.4 cM from the centromere).
Using a large segregating population (~ 2800 gametes) and extensive progeny tests (70–93 plants per recombinant family),
we mapped QHt.ucw-6AS as a Mendelian locus to a 0.2 cM interval (144.0–148.3 Mb, IWGSC Ref Seq v1.0) and show that
it is different from Rht18. QHt.ucw-6AS is officially designated as Rht25, with Rht25a representing the height-increasing
allele and Rht25b the dwarfing allele. The average dwarfing effect of Rht25b was found to be approximately half of the effect
observed for Rht-B1b and Rht-D1b, and the effect is greater in the presence of the height-increasing Rht-B1a and Rht-D1a
alleles than in the presence of the dwarfing alleles. Rht25b is gibberellin-sensitive and shows significant pleiotropic effects
on coleoptile length, heading date, spike length, spikelet number, spikelet density, and grain weight. Rht25 represents a new
alternative dwarfing locus that should be evaluated for its potential to improve wheat yield in different environments.