Genome-Wide Association Study to Identify Possible Candidate Genes of Snap Bean Leaf and Pod Color

Author:

Celebioglu Burcu1,Hart John P.2ORCID,Porch Timothy2,Griffiths Phillip3,Myers James R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Horticulture, Oregon State University, 4017 Ag & Life Science Bldg., Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

2. USDA-ARS, Tropical Agriculture Research Station (TARS), 2200 P. A. Campos Ave., Suite 201, Mayagüez, PR 00680, USA

3. School of Integrated Plant Sciences, Horticulture Section, Cornell Agritech, 635 W. North St., Geneva, NY 14456, USA

Abstract

Color can be an indicator of plant health, quality, and productivity, and is useful to researchers to understand plant nutritional content in their studies. Color may be related to chlorophyll content and photosynthetic activity and provides information for those studying diseases and mineral nutrition because every nutrient deficiency and many diseases produce symptoms that affect color. In order to identify significant loci related to both leaf and pod color in a snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) diversity panel, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) was carried out. Leaf color in one and pod traits in multiple environments were characterized using a colorimeter. L*a*b* color data were recorded and used to calculate chroma (C*) and hue angle (H°). Leaves were evaluated at three positions (lower, middle, and upper) in the canopy and both pod exterior and interior colors were obtained. GWAS was conducted using two reference genomes that represent the Andean (G19833) and Middle American (5-593) domestication centers. Narrow sense heritabilities were calculated using the mixed linear model (MLM) method in genome association and prediction integrated tool (GAPIT), and significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for each color parameter were obtained using the Bayesian-information and linkage-disequilibrium iteratively nested keyway (BLINK) GWAS model with two principal components (PCAs). In comparison to pod color traits, narrow sense heritabilities of leaf traits were low and similar for both reference genomes. Generally, narrow sense heritability for all traits was highest in the lower, followed by middle, and then upper leaf positions. Heritability for both pod interior and exterior color traits was higher using the G19833 reference genome compared to 5-593 when evaluated by year and means across years. Forty-five significant SNPs associated with leaf traits and 872 associated with pods, totaling 917 significant SNPs were identified. Only one SNP was found in common for both leaf and pod traits on Pv03 in the 5-593 reference genome. One-hundred thirteen significant SNPs, 30 in leaves and 83 in pods had phenotypic variation explained (PVE) of 10% or greater. Fourteen SNPs (four from G19833 and ten from 5-593) with ≥10 PVE%, large SNP effect, and largest p-value for L* and H° pod exterior was identified on Pv01, Pv02, Pv03, and Pv08. More SNPs were associated with pod traits than with leaf traits. The pod interior did not exhibit colors produced by anthocyanins or flavonols which allowed the differentiation of potential candidate genes associated with chloroplast and photosynthetic activity compared to the pod exterior where candidate genes related to both flavonoids and photosynthesis affected color. Several SNPs were associated with known qualitative genes including the wax pod locus (y), persistent color (pc), purple pods (V), and two genes expressed in seeds but not previously reported to affect other plant tissues (B and J). An evaluation of significant SNPs within annotated genes found a number, within a 200 kb window, involved in both flavonoid and photosynthetic biosynthetic pathways.

Funder

Baggett-Frazier Vegetable Breeding and Genetics endowment

Turkish Ministry of National Education

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference77 articles.

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3. Singh, S.P. (1999). Common Bean Improvement in the Twenty-First Century, Springer. Developments in Plant Breeding.

4. Molecular and phenotypic mapping of genes controlling seed coat pattern and color in common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.);McClean;J. Hered.,2002

5. Inheritance of colour in Phaseolus vulgaris L. IV recombination within the “Complex Locus C.”;Prakken;Meded Landbouwhogesch. Wagening.,1974

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