1 SNP-based analysis of genetic diversity reveals important alleles associated with seed size in rice [期刊论文]
BMC Plant Biology,2016年
Tingting Wu, Gaoming Chen, Jun Yu, Jianpeng Tang, Yue Jiang, Juan Sun, Chunming Wang, Weijie Tang, Jianmin Wan, Jian Ye
LicenseType:CC BY |
BackgroundSingle-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have become the genetic markers of choice in various genetic, ecological, and evolutionary studies. Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) is a next-generation-sequencing based method that takes advantage of reduced representation to enable high-throughput genotyping using a large number of SNP markers.ResultsIn the present study, the distribution of non-redundant SNPs in the parents of 12 rice recombination line populations was evaluated through GBS. A total of 45 Gigabites of nucleotide sequences conservatively provided satisfactory genotyping of rice SNPs. By assembling to the genomes of reference genomes of japonica Nipponbare, we detected 22,682 polymorphic SNPs that may be utilized for QTL/gene mapping with the Recombinant Inbred Lines (RIL) populations derived from these parental lines. Meanwhile, we identified polymorphic SNPs with large effects on protein-coding and miRNA genes. To validate the effect of the polymorphic SNPs, we further investigated a SNP (chr4:28,894,757) at the miRNA binding site in the 3′-UTR region of the locus Os4g48460, which is associated with rice seed size. Os4g48460 encodes a putative cytochrome P450, CYP704A3. Direct degradation of the 3′-UTR of the CYP704A3 gene by a miRNA (osa-miRf10422-akr) was validated by in planta mRNA degradation assay. We also showed that rice seeds of longer lengths may be produced by downregulating CYP704A3 via RNAi.ConclusionsOur study has identified the genome-wide SNPs by GBS of the parental varieties of RIL populations and identified CYP704A3, a miRNA-regulated gene that is responsible for rice seed length.
BMC Plant Biology,2016年
Juan Sun, Jun Yu, Gaoming Chen, Tingting Wu, Jianpeng Tang, Yue Jiang, Chunming Wang, Weijie Tang, Jianmin Wan, Jian Ye
LicenseType:CC BY |
3 SNP-based analysis of genetic diversity reveals important alleles associated with seed size in rice [期刊论文]
BMC Plant Biology,2016年
Tingting Wu, Gaoming Chen, Jun Yu, Jianpeng Tang, Yue Jiang, Juan Sun, Chunming Wang, Weijie Tang, Jianmin Wan, Jian Ye
LicenseType:CC BY |
BackgroundSingle-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have become the genetic markers of choice in various genetic, ecological, and evolutionary studies. Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) is a next-generation-sequencing based method that takes advantage of reduced representation to enable high-throughput genotyping using a large number of SNP markers.ResultsIn the present study, the distribution of non-redundant SNPs in the parents of 12 rice recombination line populations was evaluated through GBS. A total of 45 Gigabites of nucleotide sequences conservatively provided satisfactory genotyping of rice SNPs. By assembling to the genomes of reference genomes of japonica Nipponbare, we detected 22,682 polymorphic SNPs that may be utilized for QTL/gene mapping with the Recombinant Inbred Lines (RIL) populations derived from these parental lines. Meanwhile, we identified polymorphic SNPs with large effects on protein-coding and miRNA genes. To validate the effect of the polymorphic SNPs, we further investigated a SNP (chr4:28,894,757) at the miRNA binding site in the 3′-UTR region of the locus Os4g48460, which is associated with rice seed size. Os4g48460 encodes a putative cytochrome P450, CYP704A3. Direct degradation of the 3′-UTR of the CYP704A3 gene by a miRNA (osa-miRf10422-akr) was validated by in planta mRNA degradation assay. We also showed that rice seeds of longer lengths may be produced by downregulating CYP704A3 via RNAi.ConclusionsOur study has identified the genome-wide SNPs by GBS of the parental varieties of RIL populations and identified CYP704A3, a miRNA-regulated gene that is responsible for rice seed length.
BMC Plant Biology,2016年
Juan Sun, Jun Yu, Gaoming Chen, Tingting Wu, Jianpeng Tang, Yue Jiang, Chunming Wang, Weijie Tang, Jianmin Wan, Jian Ye
LicenseType:CC BY |