Genomic regions of durum wheat involved in water productivity

Author:

Zaïm Meryem12ORCID,Sanchez-Garcia Miguel2,Belkadi Bouchra1ORCID,Filali-Maltouf Abdelkarim1ORCID,Al Abdallat Ayed3ORCID,Kehel Zakaria2ORCID,Bassi Filippo M2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Sciences, University Mohammed V in Rabat , Morocco

2. ICARDA, Biodiversity and Integrated Gene Management , P.O. Box 6299, Rabat Institutes, Rabat , Morocco

3. Faculty of Agriculture, The University of Jordan , Amman 11942 , Jordan

Abstract

Abstract Durum wheat is a staple food in the Mediterranean Basin, mostly cultivated under rainfed conditions. As such, the crop is often exposed to moisture stress. Therefore, the identification of genetic factors controlling the capacity of genotypes to convert moisture into grain yield (i.e., water productivity) is quintessential to stabilize production despite climatic variations. A global panel of 384 accessions was tested across 18 Mediterranean environments (in Morocco, Lebanon, and Jordan) representing a vast range of moisture levels. The accessions were assigned to water responsiveness classes, with genotypes ‘Responsive to Low Moisture’ reaching an average +1.5 kg ha–1 mm–1 yield advantage. Genome wide association studies revealed that six loci explained most of this variation. A second validation panel tested under moisture stress confirmed that carrying the positive allele at three loci on chromosomes 1B, 2A, and 7B generated an average water productivity gain of +2.2 kg ha–1 mm–1. These three loci were tagged by kompetitive allele specific PCR (KASP) markers, and these were used to screen a third independent validation panel composed of elites tested across moisture stressed sites. The three KASP combined predicted up to 10% of the variation for grain yield at 60% accuracy. These loci are now ready for molecular pyramiding and transfer across cultivars to improve the moisture conversion of durum wheat.

Funder

Australian Grains Research and Development Corporation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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