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Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China

BACKGROUND: Flowering time greatly influences the adaptation of wheat cultivars to diverse environmental conditions and is mainly controlled by vernalization and photoperiod genes. In wheat cultivars from the Yellow and Huai Valleys, which represent 60%-70% of the total wheat production in China, th...

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Autores principales: Chen, Feng, Gao, Manxia, Zhang, Jianghua, Zuo, Aihui, Shang, Xiaoli, Cui, Dangqun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4029403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24314021
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-13-199
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author Chen, Feng
Gao, Manxia
Zhang, Jianghua
Zuo, Aihui
Shang, Xiaoli
Cui, Dangqun
author_facet Chen, Feng
Gao, Manxia
Zhang, Jianghua
Zuo, Aihui
Shang, Xiaoli
Cui, Dangqun
author_sort Chen, Feng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Flowering time greatly influences the adaptation of wheat cultivars to diverse environmental conditions and is mainly controlled by vernalization and photoperiod genes. In wheat cultivars from the Yellow and Huai Valleys, which represent 60%-70% of the total wheat production in China, the large-scale genotyping of wheat germplasms has not yet been performed in terms of vernalization and photoperiod response alleles, limiting the use of Chinese wheat germplasms to a certain extent. RESULTS: In this study, 173 winter wheat cultivars and 51 spring wheat cultivars from China were used to identify allelic variations of vernalization and photoperiod genes as well as copy number variations of Ppd-B1 and Vrn-A1. Two new co-dominant markers were developed in order to more precisely examine Vrn-A1b, Vrn-B1a, and Vrn-B1b. Two novel alleles at the Vrn-B3 locus were discovered and were designated Vrn-B3b and Vrn-B3c. Vrn-B3b had an 890-bp insertion in the promoter region of the recessive vrn-B3 allele, and Vrn-B3c allele had 2 deletions (a 20-bp deletion and a 4-bp deletion) in the promoter region of the dominant Vrn-B3a allele. Cultivar Hemai 26 lacked the Vrn-A1 gene. RT-PCR indicated that the 890-bp insertion in the Vrn-B3b allele significantly reduced the transcription of the Vrn-B3 gene. Cultivars Chadianhong with the Vrn-B3b allele and Hemai 26 with a Vrn-A1-null allele possessed relatively later heading and flowering times compared to those of Yanzhan 4110, which harbored recessive vrn-B3 and vrn-A1 alleles. Through identification of photoperiod genes, 2 new polymorphism combinations were found in 6 winter wheat cultivars and were designated Hapl-VII and Hapl-VIII, respectively. Distribution of the vernalization and photoperiod genes indicated that all recessive alleles at the 4 vernalization response loci, truncated “Chinese Spring” Ppd-B1 allele at Ppd-B1 locus and Hapl-I at the Ppd-D1 locus were predominant in Chinese winter wheat cultivars. CONCLUSION: This study illustrated the distribution of vernalization and photoperiod genes and identified 2 new Vrn-B3 alleles, 1 Vrn-A1-null allele, and two new Ppd-D1 polymorphism combinations, using developed functional markers. Results of this study have the potential to provide useful information for screening relatively superior wheat cultivars for better adaptability and maturity.
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spelling pubmed-40294032014-05-22 Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China Chen, Feng Gao, Manxia Zhang, Jianghua Zuo, Aihui Shang, Xiaoli Cui, Dangqun BMC Plant Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Flowering time greatly influences the adaptation of wheat cultivars to diverse environmental conditions and is mainly controlled by vernalization and photoperiod genes. In wheat cultivars from the Yellow and Huai Valleys, which represent 60%-70% of the total wheat production in China, the large-scale genotyping of wheat germplasms has not yet been performed in terms of vernalization and photoperiod response alleles, limiting the use of Chinese wheat germplasms to a certain extent. RESULTS: In this study, 173 winter wheat cultivars and 51 spring wheat cultivars from China were used to identify allelic variations of vernalization and photoperiod genes as well as copy number variations of Ppd-B1 and Vrn-A1. Two new co-dominant markers were developed in order to more precisely examine Vrn-A1b, Vrn-B1a, and Vrn-B1b. Two novel alleles at the Vrn-B3 locus were discovered and were designated Vrn-B3b and Vrn-B3c. Vrn-B3b had an 890-bp insertion in the promoter region of the recessive vrn-B3 allele, and Vrn-B3c allele had 2 deletions (a 20-bp deletion and a 4-bp deletion) in the promoter region of the dominant Vrn-B3a allele. Cultivar Hemai 26 lacked the Vrn-A1 gene. RT-PCR indicated that the 890-bp insertion in the Vrn-B3b allele significantly reduced the transcription of the Vrn-B3 gene. Cultivars Chadianhong with the Vrn-B3b allele and Hemai 26 with a Vrn-A1-null allele possessed relatively later heading and flowering times compared to those of Yanzhan 4110, which harbored recessive vrn-B3 and vrn-A1 alleles. Through identification of photoperiod genes, 2 new polymorphism combinations were found in 6 winter wheat cultivars and were designated Hapl-VII and Hapl-VIII, respectively. Distribution of the vernalization and photoperiod genes indicated that all recessive alleles at the 4 vernalization response loci, truncated “Chinese Spring” Ppd-B1 allele at Ppd-B1 locus and Hapl-I at the Ppd-D1 locus were predominant in Chinese winter wheat cultivars. CONCLUSION: This study illustrated the distribution of vernalization and photoperiod genes and identified 2 new Vrn-B3 alleles, 1 Vrn-A1-null allele, and two new Ppd-D1 polymorphism combinations, using developed functional markers. Results of this study have the potential to provide useful information for screening relatively superior wheat cultivars for better adaptability and maturity. BioMed Central 2013-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4029403/ /pubmed/24314021 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-13-199 Text en Copyright © 2013 Chen et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chen, Feng
Gao, Manxia
Zhang, Jianghua
Zuo, Aihui
Shang, Xiaoli
Cui, Dangqun
Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title_full Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title_fullStr Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title_full_unstemmed Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title_short Molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the Yellow and Huai Valley of China
title_sort molecular characterization of vernalization and response genes in bread wheat from the yellow and huai valley of china
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4029403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24314021
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-13-199
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