Genome-wide Association Mapping of Cold Tolerance Genes at the Seedling Stage in Rice

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Abstract

Background: Rice is a temperature-sensitive crop and its production is severely affected by low temperature in temperate and sub-tropical regions. To understand the genetic basis of cold tolerance in rice, we evaluated the cold tolerance at the seedling stage (CTS) of 295 rice cultivars in the rice diversity panel 1 (RDP1), these cultivars were collected from 82 countries. Results: The evaluations revealed that both temperate and tropical japonica rice cultivars are more tolerant to cold stress than indica and AUS cultivars. Using the cold tolerance phenotypes and 44 K SNP chip dataset of RDP1, we performed genome-wide association mapping of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for CTS. The analysis identified 67 QTLs for CTS that are located on 11 chromosomes. Fifty-six of these QTLs are located in regions without known cold tolerance-related QTLs. Conclusion: Our study has provided new information on the genetic architecture of rice cold tolerance and has also identified highly cold tolerant cultivars and CTS-associated SNP markers that will be useful rice improvement.

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Wang, D., Liu, J., Li, C., Kang, H., Wang, Y., Tan, X., … Wang, G. L. (2016). Genome-wide Association Mapping of Cold Tolerance Genes at the Seedling Stage in Rice. Rice, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12284-016-0133-2

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