Cargando…

A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family

Cellulose is a fundamentally important component of cell walls of higher plants. It provides a scaffold that allows the development and growth of the plant to occur in an ordered fashion. Cellulose also provides mechanical strength, which is crucial for both normal development and to enable the plan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Houston, Kelly, Burton, Rachel A., Sznajder, Beata, Rafalski, Antoni J., Dhugga, Kanwarpal S., Mather, Diane E., Taylor, Jillian, Steffenson, Brian J., Waugh, Robbie, Fincher, Geoffrey B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4496100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26154104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130890
_version_ 1782380347097350144
author Houston, Kelly
Burton, Rachel A.
Sznajder, Beata
Rafalski, Antoni J.
Dhugga, Kanwarpal S.
Mather, Diane E.
Taylor, Jillian
Steffenson, Brian J.
Waugh, Robbie
Fincher, Geoffrey B.
author_facet Houston, Kelly
Burton, Rachel A.
Sznajder, Beata
Rafalski, Antoni J.
Dhugga, Kanwarpal S.
Mather, Diane E.
Taylor, Jillian
Steffenson, Brian J.
Waugh, Robbie
Fincher, Geoffrey B.
author_sort Houston, Kelly
collection PubMed
description Cellulose is a fundamentally important component of cell walls of higher plants. It provides a scaffold that allows the development and growth of the plant to occur in an ordered fashion. Cellulose also provides mechanical strength, which is crucial for both normal development and to enable the plant to withstand both abiotic and biotic stresses. We quantified the cellulose concentration in the culm of 288 two – rowed and 288 six – rowed spring type barley accessions that were part of the USDA funded barley Coordinated Agricultural Project (CAP) program in the USA. When the population structure of these accessions was analysed we identified six distinct populations, four of which we considered to be comprised of a sufficient number of accessions to be suitable for genome-wide association studies (GWAS). These lines had been genotyped with 3072 SNPs so we combined the trait and genetic data to carry out GWAS. The analysis allowed us to identify regions of the genome containing significant associations between molecular markers and cellulose concentration data, including one region cross-validated in multiple populations. To identify candidate genes we assembled the gene content of these regions and used these to query a comprehensive RNA-seq based gene expression atlas. This provided us with gene annotations and associated expression data across multiple tissues, which allowed us to formulate a supported list of candidate genes that regulate cellulose biosynthesis. Several regions identified by our analysis contain genes that are co-expressed with CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A (HvCesA) across a range of tissues and developmental stages. These genes are involved in both primary and secondary cell wall development. In addition, genes that have been previously linked with cellulose synthesis by biochemical methods, such as HvCOBRA, a gene of unknown function, were also associated with cellulose levels in the association panel. Our analyses provide new insights into the genes that contribute to cellulose content in cereal culms and to a greater understanding of the interactions between them.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4496100
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-44961002015-07-15 A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family Houston, Kelly Burton, Rachel A. Sznajder, Beata Rafalski, Antoni J. Dhugga, Kanwarpal S. Mather, Diane E. Taylor, Jillian Steffenson, Brian J. Waugh, Robbie Fincher, Geoffrey B. PLoS One Research Article Cellulose is a fundamentally important component of cell walls of higher plants. It provides a scaffold that allows the development and growth of the plant to occur in an ordered fashion. Cellulose also provides mechanical strength, which is crucial for both normal development and to enable the plant to withstand both abiotic and biotic stresses. We quantified the cellulose concentration in the culm of 288 two – rowed and 288 six – rowed spring type barley accessions that were part of the USDA funded barley Coordinated Agricultural Project (CAP) program in the USA. When the population structure of these accessions was analysed we identified six distinct populations, four of which we considered to be comprised of a sufficient number of accessions to be suitable for genome-wide association studies (GWAS). These lines had been genotyped with 3072 SNPs so we combined the trait and genetic data to carry out GWAS. The analysis allowed us to identify regions of the genome containing significant associations between molecular markers and cellulose concentration data, including one region cross-validated in multiple populations. To identify candidate genes we assembled the gene content of these regions and used these to query a comprehensive RNA-seq based gene expression atlas. This provided us with gene annotations and associated expression data across multiple tissues, which allowed us to formulate a supported list of candidate genes that regulate cellulose biosynthesis. Several regions identified by our analysis contain genes that are co-expressed with CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A (HvCesA) across a range of tissues and developmental stages. These genes are involved in both primary and secondary cell wall development. In addition, genes that have been previously linked with cellulose synthesis by biochemical methods, such as HvCOBRA, a gene of unknown function, were also associated with cellulose levels in the association panel. Our analyses provide new insights into the genes that contribute to cellulose content in cereal culms and to a greater understanding of the interactions between them. Public Library of Science 2015-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4496100/ /pubmed/26154104 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130890 Text en © 2015 Houston 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
Houston, Kelly
Burton, Rachel A.
Sznajder, Beata
Rafalski, Antoni J.
Dhugga, Kanwarpal S.
Mather, Diane E.
Taylor, Jillian
Steffenson, Brian J.
Waugh, Robbie
Fincher, Geoffrey B.
A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title_full A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title_fullStr A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title_full_unstemmed A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title_short A Genome-Wide Association Study for Culm Cellulose Content in Barley Reveals Candidate Genes Co-Expressed with Members of the CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A Gene Family
title_sort genome-wide association study for culm cellulose content in barley reveals candidate genes co-expressed with members of the cellulose synthase a gene family
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4496100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26154104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130890
work_keys_str_mv AT houstonkelly agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT burtonrachela agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT sznajderbeata agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT rafalskiantonij agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT dhuggakanwarpals agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT matherdianee agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT taylorjillian agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT steffensonbrianj agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT waughrobbie agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT finchergeoffreyb agenomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT houstonkelly genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT burtonrachela genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT sznajderbeata genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT rafalskiantonij genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT dhuggakanwarpals genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT matherdianee genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT taylorjillian genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT steffensonbrianj genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT waughrobbie genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily
AT finchergeoffreyb genomewideassociationstudyforculmcellulosecontentinbarleyrevealscandidategenescoexpressedwithmembersofthecellulosesynthaseagenefamily