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Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes

Salinity tolerance is an important quality for European rice grown in river deltas. We evaluated the salinity tolerance of a panel of 235 temperate japonica rice accessions genotyped with 30,000 SNP markers. The panel was exposed to mild salt stress (50 mM NaCl; conductivity of 6 dS m(-1)) at the se...

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Autores principales: Frouin, Julien, Languillaume, Antoine, Mas, Justine, Mieulet, Delphine, Boisnard, Arnaud, Labeyrie, Axel, Bettembourg, Mathilde, Bureau, Charlotte, Lorenzini, Eve, Portefaix, Muriel, Turquay, Patricia, Vernet, Aurore, Périn, Christophe, Ahmadi, Nourollah, Courtois, Brigitte
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5771603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29342194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190964
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author Frouin, Julien
Languillaume, Antoine
Mas, Justine
Mieulet, Delphine
Boisnard, Arnaud
Labeyrie, Axel
Bettembourg, Mathilde
Bureau, Charlotte
Lorenzini, Eve
Portefaix, Muriel
Turquay, Patricia
Vernet, Aurore
Périn, Christophe
Ahmadi, Nourollah
Courtois, Brigitte
author_facet Frouin, Julien
Languillaume, Antoine
Mas, Justine
Mieulet, Delphine
Boisnard, Arnaud
Labeyrie, Axel
Bettembourg, Mathilde
Bureau, Charlotte
Lorenzini, Eve
Portefaix, Muriel
Turquay, Patricia
Vernet, Aurore
Périn, Christophe
Ahmadi, Nourollah
Courtois, Brigitte
author_sort Frouin, Julien
collection PubMed
description Salinity tolerance is an important quality for European rice grown in river deltas. We evaluated the salinity tolerance of a panel of 235 temperate japonica rice accessions genotyped with 30,000 SNP markers. The panel was exposed to mild salt stress (50 mM NaCl; conductivity of 6 dS m(-1)) at the seedling stage. Eight different root and shoot growth parameters were measured for both the control and stressed treatments. The Na(+) and K(+) mass fractions of the stressed plants were measured using atomic absorption spectroscopy. The salt treatment affected plant growth, particularly the shoot parameters. The panel showed a wide range of Na(+)/K(+) ratio and the temperate accessions were distributed over an increasing axis, from the most resistant to the most susceptible checks. We conducted a genome-wide association study on indices of stress response and ion mass fractions in the leaves using a classical mixed model controlling structure and kinship. A total of 27 QTLs validated by sub-sampling were identified. For indices of stress responses, we also used another model that focused on marker × treatment interactions and detected 50 QTLs, three of which were also identified using the classical method. We compared the positions of the significant QTLs to those of approximately 300 genes that play a role in rice salt tolerance. The positions of several QTLs were close to those of genes involved in calcium signaling and metabolism, while other QTLs were close to those of kinases. These results reveal the salinity tolerance of accessions with a temperate japonica background. Although the detected QTLs must be confirmed by other approaches, the number of associations linked to candidate genes involved in calcium-mediated ion homeostasis highlights pathways to explore in priority to understand the salinity tolerance of temperate rice.
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spelling pubmed-57716032018-01-23 Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes Frouin, Julien Languillaume, Antoine Mas, Justine Mieulet, Delphine Boisnard, Arnaud Labeyrie, Axel Bettembourg, Mathilde Bureau, Charlotte Lorenzini, Eve Portefaix, Muriel Turquay, Patricia Vernet, Aurore Périn, Christophe Ahmadi, Nourollah Courtois, Brigitte PLoS One Research Article Salinity tolerance is an important quality for European rice grown in river deltas. We evaluated the salinity tolerance of a panel of 235 temperate japonica rice accessions genotyped with 30,000 SNP markers. The panel was exposed to mild salt stress (50 mM NaCl; conductivity of 6 dS m(-1)) at the seedling stage. Eight different root and shoot growth parameters were measured for both the control and stressed treatments. The Na(+) and K(+) mass fractions of the stressed plants were measured using atomic absorption spectroscopy. The salt treatment affected plant growth, particularly the shoot parameters. The panel showed a wide range of Na(+)/K(+) ratio and the temperate accessions were distributed over an increasing axis, from the most resistant to the most susceptible checks. We conducted a genome-wide association study on indices of stress response and ion mass fractions in the leaves using a classical mixed model controlling structure and kinship. A total of 27 QTLs validated by sub-sampling were identified. For indices of stress responses, we also used another model that focused on marker × treatment interactions and detected 50 QTLs, three of which were also identified using the classical method. We compared the positions of the significant QTLs to those of approximately 300 genes that play a role in rice salt tolerance. The positions of several QTLs were close to those of genes involved in calcium signaling and metabolism, while other QTLs were close to those of kinases. These results reveal the salinity tolerance of accessions with a temperate japonica background. Although the detected QTLs must be confirmed by other approaches, the number of associations linked to candidate genes involved in calcium-mediated ion homeostasis highlights pathways to explore in priority to understand the salinity tolerance of temperate rice. Public Library of Science 2018-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5771603/ /pubmed/29342194 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190964 Text en © 2018 Frouin 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Frouin, Julien
Languillaume, Antoine
Mas, Justine
Mieulet, Delphine
Boisnard, Arnaud
Labeyrie, Axel
Bettembourg, Mathilde
Bureau, Charlotte
Lorenzini, Eve
Portefaix, Muriel
Turquay, Patricia
Vernet, Aurore
Périn, Christophe
Ahmadi, Nourollah
Courtois, Brigitte
Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title_full Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title_fullStr Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title_full_unstemmed Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title_short Tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: A genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
title_sort tolerance to mild salinity stress in japonica rice: a genome-wide association mapping study highlights calcium signaling and metabolism genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5771603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29342194
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190964
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