Genomics of predictive radiation mutagenesis in oilseed rape: modifying seed oil composition

Author:

Havlickova Lenka1,He Zhesi1,Berger Madeleine1,Wang Lihong1,Sandmann Greta1,Chew Yen Peng1ORCID,Yoshikawa Guilherme V.1,Lu Guangyuan23,Hu Qiong2ORCID,Banga Surinder S.4ORCID,Beaudoin Frederic5,Bancroft Ian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of York York UK

2. Department of Rapeseed Genetics and Breeding, Oil Crops Research Institute CAAS Wuhan China

3. College of Biology and Food Engineering Guangdong University of Petrochemical Technology Maoming China

4. Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics Punjab Agricultural University Ludhiana India

5. Plant Sciences for the Bioeconomy Rothamsted Research Harpenden UK

Abstract

SummaryRapeseed is a crop of global importance but there is a need to broaden the genetic diversity available to address breeding objectives. Radiation mutagenesis, supported by genomics, has the potential to supersede genome editing for both gene knockout and copy number increase, but detailed knowledge of the molecular outcomes of radiation treatment is lacking. To address this, we produced a genome re‐sequenced panel of 1133 M2 generation rapeseed plants and analysed large‐scale deletions, single nucleotide variants and small insertion–deletion variants affecting gene open reading frames. We show that high radiation doses (2000 Gy) are tolerated, gamma radiation and fast neutron radiation have similar impacts and that segments deleted from the genomes of some plants are inherited as additional copies by their siblings, enabling gene dosage decrease. Of relevance for species with larger genomes, we showed that these large‐scale impacts can also be detected using transcriptome re‐sequencing. To test the utility of the approach for predictive alteration of oil fatty acid composition, we produced lines with both decreased and increased copy numbers of Bna.FAE1 and confirmed the anticipated impacts on erucic acid content. We detected and tested a 21‐base deletion expected to abolish function of Bna.FAD2.A5, for which we confirmed the predicted reduction in seed oil polyunsaturated fatty acid content. Our improved understanding of the molecular effects of radiation mutagenesis will underpin genomics‐led approaches to more efficient introduction of novel genetic variation into the breeding of this crop and provides an exemplar for the predictive improvement of other crops.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,Biotechnology

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