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Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm

Grain weight (GW) and number per unit area of land (GN) are the primary components of grain yield in wheat. In segregating populations both yield components often show a negative correlation among themselves. Here we use a recombinant doubled haploid population of 105 individuals developed from the...

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Autores principales: Griffiths, Simon, Wingen, Luzie, Pietragalla, Julian, Garcia, Guillermo, Hasan, Ahmed, Miralles, Daniel, Calderini, Daniel F., Ankleshwaria, Jignaben Bipinchandra, Waite, Michelle Leverington, Simmonds, James, Snape, John, Reynolds, Matthew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775191
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118847
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author Griffiths, Simon
Wingen, Luzie
Pietragalla, Julian
Garcia, Guillermo
Hasan, Ahmed
Miralles, Daniel
Calderini, Daniel F.
Ankleshwaria, Jignaben Bipinchandra
Waite, Michelle Leverington
Simmonds, James
Snape, John
Reynolds, Matthew
author_facet Griffiths, Simon
Wingen, Luzie
Pietragalla, Julian
Garcia, Guillermo
Hasan, Ahmed
Miralles, Daniel
Calderini, Daniel F.
Ankleshwaria, Jignaben Bipinchandra
Waite, Michelle Leverington
Simmonds, James
Snape, John
Reynolds, Matthew
author_sort Griffiths, Simon
collection PubMed
description Grain weight (GW) and number per unit area of land (GN) are the primary components of grain yield in wheat. In segregating populations both yield components often show a negative correlation among themselves. Here we use a recombinant doubled haploid population of 105 individuals developed from the CIMMYT varieties Weebill and Bacanora to understand the relative contribution of these components to grain yield and their interaction with each other. Weebill was chosen for its high GW and Bacanora for high GN. The population was phenotyped in Mexico, Argentina, Chile and the UK. Two loci influencing grain yield were indicated on 1B and 7B after QTL analysis. Weebill contributed the increasing alleles. The 1B effect, which is probably caused by to the 1BL.1RS rye introgression in Bacanora, was a result of increased GN, whereas, the 7B QTL controls GW. We concluded that increased in GW from Weebill 7B allele is not accompanied by a significant reduction in grain number. The extent of the GW and GN trade-off is reduced. This makes this locus an attractive target for marker assisted selection to develop high yielding bold grain varieties like Weebill. AMMI analysis was used to show that the 7B Weebill allele appears to contribute to yield stability.
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spelling pubmed-43615562015-03-23 Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm Griffiths, Simon Wingen, Luzie Pietragalla, Julian Garcia, Guillermo Hasan, Ahmed Miralles, Daniel Calderini, Daniel F. Ankleshwaria, Jignaben Bipinchandra Waite, Michelle Leverington Simmonds, James Snape, John Reynolds, Matthew PLoS One Research Article Grain weight (GW) and number per unit area of land (GN) are the primary components of grain yield in wheat. In segregating populations both yield components often show a negative correlation among themselves. Here we use a recombinant doubled haploid population of 105 individuals developed from the CIMMYT varieties Weebill and Bacanora to understand the relative contribution of these components to grain yield and their interaction with each other. Weebill was chosen for its high GW and Bacanora for high GN. The population was phenotyped in Mexico, Argentina, Chile and the UK. Two loci influencing grain yield were indicated on 1B and 7B after QTL analysis. Weebill contributed the increasing alleles. The 1B effect, which is probably caused by to the 1BL.1RS rye introgression in Bacanora, was a result of increased GN, whereas, the 7B QTL controls GW. We concluded that increased in GW from Weebill 7B allele is not accompanied by a significant reduction in grain number. The extent of the GW and GN trade-off is reduced. This makes this locus an attractive target for marker assisted selection to develop high yielding bold grain varieties like Weebill. AMMI analysis was used to show that the 7B Weebill allele appears to contribute to yield stability. Public Library of Science 2015-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4361556/ /pubmed/25775191 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118847 Text en © 2015 Griffiths et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Griffiths, Simon
Wingen, Luzie
Pietragalla, Julian
Garcia, Guillermo
Hasan, Ahmed
Miralles, Daniel
Calderini, Daniel F.
Ankleshwaria, Jignaben Bipinchandra
Waite, Michelle Leverington
Simmonds, James
Snape, John
Reynolds, Matthew
Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title_full Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title_fullStr Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title_short Genetic Dissection of Grain Size and Grain Number Trade-Offs in CIMMYT Wheat Germplasm
title_sort genetic dissection of grain size and grain number trade-offs in cimmyt wheat germplasm
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775191
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118847
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