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Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population

Heterosis refers to a quantitative phenomenon in which F1 hybrid trait values exceed the mean of the parental values in a positive direction. Generally, it is dependent on a high degree of heterozygosity, which is maintained in hybrid breeding by developing parental lines in separate, genetically di...

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Autores principales: Seifert, Felix, Thiemann, Alexander, Grant-Downton, Robert, Edelmann, Susanne, Rybka, Dominika, Schrag, Tobias A., Frisch, Matthias, Dickinson, Hugh G., Melchinger, Albrecht E., Scholten, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5797689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29441076
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00013
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author Seifert, Felix
Thiemann, Alexander
Grant-Downton, Robert
Edelmann, Susanne
Rybka, Dominika
Schrag, Tobias A.
Frisch, Matthias
Dickinson, Hugh G.
Melchinger, Albrecht E.
Scholten, Stefan
author_facet Seifert, Felix
Thiemann, Alexander
Grant-Downton, Robert
Edelmann, Susanne
Rybka, Dominika
Schrag, Tobias A.
Frisch, Matthias
Dickinson, Hugh G.
Melchinger, Albrecht E.
Scholten, Stefan
author_sort Seifert, Felix
collection PubMed
description Heterosis refers to a quantitative phenomenon in which F1 hybrid trait values exceed the mean of the parental values in a positive direction. Generally, it is dependent on a high degree of heterozygosity, which is maintained in hybrid breeding by developing parental lines in separate, genetically distinct heterotic groups. The mobility of small RNAs (sRNAs) that mediate epigenetic regulation of gene expression renders them promising candidates for modulating the action of combined diverse genomes in trans–and evidence already indicates their contribution to transgressive phenotypes. By sequencing small RNA libraries of a panel of 21 maize parental inbred lines we found a low overlap of 35% between the sRNA populations from both distinct heterotic groups. Surprisingly, in contrast to genetic or gene expression variation, parental sRNA expression variation is negatively correlated with grain yield (GY) heterosis. Among 0.595 million expressed sRNAs, we identified 9,767, predominantly 22- and 24-nt long sRNAs, which showed an association of their differential expression between parental lines and GY heterosis of the respective hybrids. Of these sRNAs, 3,485 or 6,282 showed an association with high or low GY heterosis, respectively, thus the low heterosis associated group prevailing at 64%. The heterosis associated sRNAs map more frequently to genes that show differential expression between parental lines than reference sets. Together these findings suggest that trans-chromosomal actions of sRNAs in hybrids might add up to a negative contribution in heterosis formation, mediated by unfavorable gene expression regulation. We further revealed an exclusive accumulation of 22-nt sRNAs that are associated with low GY heterosis in pericentromeric genomic regions. That recombinational suppression led to this enrichment is indicated by its close correlation with low recombination rates. The existence of this enrichment, which we hypothesize resulted from the separated breeding of inbred lines within heterotic groups, may have implications for hybrid breeding strategies addressing the recombinational constraints characteristic of complex crop genomes.
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spelling pubmed-57976892018-02-13 Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population Seifert, Felix Thiemann, Alexander Grant-Downton, Robert Edelmann, Susanne Rybka, Dominika Schrag, Tobias A. Frisch, Matthias Dickinson, Hugh G. Melchinger, Albrecht E. Scholten, Stefan Front Plant Sci Plant Science Heterosis refers to a quantitative phenomenon in which F1 hybrid trait values exceed the mean of the parental values in a positive direction. Generally, it is dependent on a high degree of heterozygosity, which is maintained in hybrid breeding by developing parental lines in separate, genetically distinct heterotic groups. The mobility of small RNAs (sRNAs) that mediate epigenetic regulation of gene expression renders them promising candidates for modulating the action of combined diverse genomes in trans–and evidence already indicates their contribution to transgressive phenotypes. By sequencing small RNA libraries of a panel of 21 maize parental inbred lines we found a low overlap of 35% between the sRNA populations from both distinct heterotic groups. Surprisingly, in contrast to genetic or gene expression variation, parental sRNA expression variation is negatively correlated with grain yield (GY) heterosis. Among 0.595 million expressed sRNAs, we identified 9,767, predominantly 22- and 24-nt long sRNAs, which showed an association of their differential expression between parental lines and GY heterosis of the respective hybrids. Of these sRNAs, 3,485 or 6,282 showed an association with high or low GY heterosis, respectively, thus the low heterosis associated group prevailing at 64%. The heterosis associated sRNAs map more frequently to genes that show differential expression between parental lines than reference sets. Together these findings suggest that trans-chromosomal actions of sRNAs in hybrids might add up to a negative contribution in heterosis formation, mediated by unfavorable gene expression regulation. We further revealed an exclusive accumulation of 22-nt sRNAs that are associated with low GY heterosis in pericentromeric genomic regions. That recombinational suppression led to this enrichment is indicated by its close correlation with low recombination rates. The existence of this enrichment, which we hypothesize resulted from the separated breeding of inbred lines within heterotic groups, may have implications for hybrid breeding strategies addressing the recombinational constraints characteristic of complex crop genomes. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5797689/ /pubmed/29441076 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00013 Text en Copyright © 2018 Seifert, Thiemann, Grant-Downton, Edelmann, Rybka, Schrag, Frisch, Dickinson, Melchinger and Scholten. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Seifert, Felix
Thiemann, Alexander
Grant-Downton, Robert
Edelmann, Susanne
Rybka, Dominika
Schrag, Tobias A.
Frisch, Matthias
Dickinson, Hugh G.
Melchinger, Albrecht E.
Scholten, Stefan
Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title_full Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title_fullStr Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title_full_unstemmed Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title_short Parental Expression Variation of Small RNAs Is Negatively Correlated with Grain Yield Heterosis in a Maize Breeding Population
title_sort parental expression variation of small rnas is negatively correlated with grain yield heterosis in a maize breeding population
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5797689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29441076
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00013
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