Haplotype-Based Genome-Wide Association Analysis Using Exome Capture Assay and Digital Phenotyping Identifies Genetic Loci Underlying Salt Tolerance Mechanisms in Wheat

Author:

Pasam Raj K.1,Kant Surya123ORCID,Thoday-Kennedy Emily2ORCID,Dimech Adam1ORCID,Joshi Sameer2,Keeble-Gagnere Gabriel1,Forrest Kerrie1,Tibbits Josquin1,Hayden Matthew13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Agriculture Victoria, AgriBio, Centre for AgriBioscience, Bundoora, VIC 3083, Australia

2. Agriculture Victoria, Grains Innovation Park, Horsham, VIC 3400, Australia

3. School of Applied Systems Biology, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3083, Australia

Abstract

Soil salinity can impose substantial stress on plant growth and cause significant yield losses. Crop varieties tolerant to salinity stress are needed to sustain yields in saline soils. This requires effective genotyping and phenotyping of germplasm pools to identify novel genes and QTL conferring salt tolerance that can be utilised in crop breeding schemes. We investigated a globally diverse collection of 580 wheat accessions for their growth response to salinity using automated digital phenotyping performed under controlled environmental conditions. The results show that digitally collected plant traits, including digital shoot growth rate and digital senescence rate, can be used as proxy traits for selecting salinity-tolerant accessions. A haplotype-based genome-wide association study was conducted using 58,502 linkage disequilibrium-based haplotype blocks derived from 883,300 genome-wide SNPs and identified 95 QTL for salinity tolerance component traits, of which 54 were novel and 41 overlapped with previously reported QTL. Gene ontology analysis identified a suite of candidate genes for salinity tolerance, some of which are already known to play a role in stress tolerance in other plant species. This study identified wheat accessions that utilise different tolerance mechanisms and which can be used in future studies to investigate the genetic and genic basis of salinity tolerance. Our results suggest salinity tolerance has not arisen from or been bred into accessions from specific regions or groups. Rather, they suggest salinity tolerance is widespread, with small-effect genetic variants contributing to different levels of tolerance in diverse, locally adapted germplasm.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference96 articles.

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4. New Insights on Plant Salt Tolerance Mechanisms and Their Potential Use for Breeding;Hanin;Front. Plant Sci.,2016

5. Mechanisms of Salinity Tolerance;Munns;Annu. Rev. Plant Biol.,2008

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