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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stuttgart, Arkansas » Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #277855

Title: Unraveling the rich phenotypic and genetic diversity in rice for varietal improvement

Author
item Eizenga, Georgia
item McClung, Anna
item MCCOUCH, SUSAN - Cornell University
item ALI, M - University Of Arkansas
item IMAI, IZE - Cornell University
item KIM, HYUNJUNG - Cornell University
item PRASAD, BISHWAJIT - University Of Arkansas
item AHN, SANG-NAG - Chungnam National University

Submitted to: Proceedings 8th SABRAO Congress
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/20/2011
Publication Date: 1/13/2012
Citation: Eizenga, G.C., Mcclung, A.M., Mccouch, S.R., Ali, M.L., Imai, I., Kim, H., Prasad, B., Ahn, S. 2012. Unraveling the rich phenotypic and genetic diversity in rice for varietal improvement. Proceedings 8th SABRAO Congress. Jan. 13-16, 2012 Chiang Mai, Thailand p. 23-24.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Asian cultivated rice (Oryza sativa L.) has two distinct varietal groups identified as the indica and japonica subspecies. With the advent of molecular markers the indica subspecies was divided into the indica and aus subpopulation groups and the japonica subspecies into the aromatic, tropical japonica and temperate japonica subpopulation groups. The wild species progenitor of O. sativa is O. rufipogon Griff. (O. nivara Sharma et Shastry). A multitude of traits important in agronomic improvement have been identified in accessions of O. rufipogon, O. nivara and other closely related species. To explore the genetic potential of the rich diversity found in rice we assembled a Rice Diversity Panel consisting of 413 O. sativa accessions. Using this panel, an association mapping study was conducted based on 44,100 SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) markers and 34 agro-morphological and grain quality traits. Several marker-trait associations unique to particular subpopulations were identified, and SNPs associated with QTL and functional genes affecting agronomically important traits. The usefulness of O. rufipogon (O. nivara) for improving sheath blight resistance and enhancing yield in cultivated rice was demonstrated utilizing advanced backcross (ABC) mapping populations. QTL mapping in two different Bengal x O. nivara ABC populations where the O. nivara accessions were sheath blight resistant, revealed seven significant sheath blight QTL on chromosomes (chr.) 1, 3, 5, 6, 9 and 10. The QTL on chr. 6 was the most significant and located in the same region as a QTL for days to heading, suggesting the longer period of time to maturity may be confounding the sheath blight ratings by making the plants appear more resistant to disease. A major QTL for plant height was noted on chr. 1 in the region of sd-1 and for plant type on chr. 9 in the region of a gene for tiller angle (TAC1). Sixty-two introgression lines (ILs) selected from the Jefferson x O. rufipogon ABC population and four commercial check cultivars were grown in replicated yield trials across two years in four locations in the southern USA. These ILs contained target introgressions from O. rufipogon at yield-related QTL on chr. 1, 2, 3, 6, 8, and 9. The highest yielding families carried introgressions on chr. 2 and chr. 6. These ILs out-yielded the Jefferson parent by greater than 20%. To further explore the transgressive variation observed, inter-specific chromosome segment substitution lines (CSSL) libraries are being developed using three genetically diverse O. rufipogon (O. nivara) accessions as donor parents. These donors were crossed to both parents: the indica cultivar, IR64, developed by IRRI, and the U.S. tropical japonica cultivar, Cybonnet. Once developed, these CSSLs will be used to explore the value of diverse O. rufipogon alleles in elite O. sativa backgrounds, dissect complex quantitative trait variation, and explore the genetic basis of transgressive variation.