Genomics and phenomics enabled prebreeding improved early-season chilling tolerance in Sorghum

Author:

Marla Sandeep1,Felderhoff Terry1,Hayes Chad2,Perumal Ramasamy3,Wang Xu45,Poland Jesse46,Morris Geoffrey P17

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agronomy, Kansas State University , Manhattan, KS 66506 , USA

2. USDA-ARS, Plant Stress & Germplasm Development Unit, Cropping Systems Research Laboratory , Lubbock, TX 79415 , USA

3. Western Kansas Agricultural Research Center, Kansas State University , Hays, KS 67601 , USA

4. Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University , Manhattan, KS 66506 , USA

5. Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, University of Florida, IFAS Gulf Coast Research and Education Center , Wimauma, FL 33598 , USA

6. Center for Desert Agriculture, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology , Thuwal 23955-6900 , Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

7. Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Colorado State University , Fort Collins, CO 80523 , USA

Abstract

Abstract In temperate climates, earlier planting of tropical-origin crops can provide longer growing seasons, reduce water loss, suppress weeds, and escape post-flowering drought stress. However, chilling sensitivity of sorghum, a tropical-origin cereal crop, limits early planting, and over 50 years of conventional breeding has been stymied by coinheritance of chilling tolerance (CT) loci with undesirable tannin and dwarfing alleles. In this study, phenomics and genomics-enabled approaches were used for prebreeding of sorghum early-season CT. Uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS) high-throughput phenotyping platform tested for improving scalability showed moderate correlation between manual and UAS phenotyping. UAS normalized difference vegetation index values from the chilling nested association mapping population detected CT quantitative trait locus (QTL) that colocalized with manual phenotyping CT QTL. Two of the 4 first-generation Kompetitive Allele Specific PCR (KASP) molecular markers, generated using the peak QTL single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), failed to function in an independent breeding program as the CT allele was common in diverse breeding lines. Population genomic fixation index analysis identified SNP CT alleles that were globally rare but common to the CT donors. Second-generation markers, generated using population genomics, were successful in tracking the donor CT allele in diverse breeding lines from 2 independent sorghum breeding programs. Marker-assisted breeding, effective in introgressing CT allele from Chinese sorghums into chilling-sensitive US elite sorghums, improved early-planted seedling performance ratings in lines with CT alleles by up to 13–24% compared to the negative control under natural chilling stress. These findings directly demonstrate the effectiveness of high-throughput phenotyping and population genomics in molecular breeding of complex adaptive traits.

Funder

Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research, Seeding Solution

Bridging the Genome-to-Phenome Breeding Gap for Water-Efficient Crop Yields

Kansas Grain Sorghum Commission

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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