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Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition

Plant hybridization is an important breeding technique essential for producing a genotype (hybrid) with favorable traits (e.g., stress tolerance, pest resistance, high yield potential etc.) to increase agronomic, economic and commercial values. Studying of genetic dominance among the population help...

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Autores principales: Hassan, Hamada M., Hadifa, Adel A., El-leithy, Sara A., Batool, Maria, Sherif, Ahmed, Al-Ashkar, Ibrahim, Ueda, Akihiro, Rahman, Md Atikur, Hossain, Mohammad Anwar, Elsabagh, Ayman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36815980
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14833
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author Hassan, Hamada M.
Hadifa, Adel A.
El-leithy, Sara A.
Batool, Maria
Sherif, Ahmed
Al-Ashkar, Ibrahim
Ueda, Akihiro
Rahman, Md Atikur
Hossain, Mohammad Anwar
Elsabagh, Ayman
author_facet Hassan, Hamada M.
Hadifa, Adel A.
El-leithy, Sara A.
Batool, Maria
Sherif, Ahmed
Al-Ashkar, Ibrahim
Ueda, Akihiro
Rahman, Md Atikur
Hossain, Mohammad Anwar
Elsabagh, Ayman
author_sort Hassan, Hamada M.
collection PubMed
description Plant hybridization is an important breeding technique essential for producing a genotype (hybrid) with favorable traits (e.g., stress tolerance, pest resistance, high yield potential etc.) to increase agronomic, economic and commercial values. Studying of genetic dominance among the population helps to determine gene action, heritability and candidate gene selection for plant breeding program. Therefore, this investigation was aimed to evaluate gene action, heritability, genetic advance and heterosis of rice root, agronomic, and yield component traits under water deficit conditions. In this study, crossing was performed among the four different water-deficit tolerant rice genotypes to produce better hybrid (F(1)), segregating (F(2)) and back-cross (BC(1) and BC(2)) populations. The Giza 178, WAB56-204, and Sakha104 × WAB56-104 populations showed the better physiological and agronomical performances, which provided better adaptability of the populations to water deficit condition. Additionally, the estimation of heterosis and heterobeltiosis of some quantitative traits in rice populations were also studied. The inheritance of all studied traits was influenced by additive gene actions. Dominance gene actions played a major role in controlling the genetic variance among studied traits in both crossed populations under well-watered and drought conditions. The additive × additive type of gene interactions was essential for the inheritance of root length, root/shoot ratio, 1,000-grain weight, and sterility % of two crossed populations under both conditions. On the contrary, the additive × dominance type of gene interactions was effective in the inheritance of all studied traits, except duration in Giza178 × Sakha106, and plant height in Sakha104 × WAB56-104 under water deficit condition. In both crosses, the dominance × dominance type of gene interactions was effective in the inheritance of root volume, root/shoot ratio, number of panicles/plant and 1,000-grain weight under both conditions. Moreover, dominance × dominance type of gene interaction played a major role in the inheritance of root length, number of roots/plant, plant height, panicle length, number of filled grain/panicle and grain yield/plant in Giza178 × Sakha106 under both conditions. The studied traits in both crossed populations indicated better genetic advance as they showed advanced qualitative and quantitative characters in rice populations under water deficit condition. Overall, our findings open a new avenue of future phenotypic and genotypic association studies in rice. These insights might be useful to the plant breeders and farmers for developing water deficit tolerant rice cultivars.
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spelling pubmed-99337702023-02-17 Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition Hassan, Hamada M. Hadifa, Adel A. El-leithy, Sara A. Batool, Maria Sherif, Ahmed Al-Ashkar, Ibrahim Ueda, Akihiro Rahman, Md Atikur Hossain, Mohammad Anwar Elsabagh, Ayman PeerJ Agricultural Science Plant hybridization is an important breeding technique essential for producing a genotype (hybrid) with favorable traits (e.g., stress tolerance, pest resistance, high yield potential etc.) to increase agronomic, economic and commercial values. Studying of genetic dominance among the population helps to determine gene action, heritability and candidate gene selection for plant breeding program. Therefore, this investigation was aimed to evaluate gene action, heritability, genetic advance and heterosis of rice root, agronomic, and yield component traits under water deficit conditions. In this study, crossing was performed among the four different water-deficit tolerant rice genotypes to produce better hybrid (F(1)), segregating (F(2)) and back-cross (BC(1) and BC(2)) populations. The Giza 178, WAB56-204, and Sakha104 × WAB56-104 populations showed the better physiological and agronomical performances, which provided better adaptability of the populations to water deficit condition. Additionally, the estimation of heterosis and heterobeltiosis of some quantitative traits in rice populations were also studied. The inheritance of all studied traits was influenced by additive gene actions. Dominance gene actions played a major role in controlling the genetic variance among studied traits in both crossed populations under well-watered and drought conditions. The additive × additive type of gene interactions was essential for the inheritance of root length, root/shoot ratio, 1,000-grain weight, and sterility % of two crossed populations under both conditions. On the contrary, the additive × dominance type of gene interactions was effective in the inheritance of all studied traits, except duration in Giza178 × Sakha106, and plant height in Sakha104 × WAB56-104 under water deficit condition. In both crosses, the dominance × dominance type of gene interactions was effective in the inheritance of root volume, root/shoot ratio, number of panicles/plant and 1,000-grain weight under both conditions. Moreover, dominance × dominance type of gene interaction played a major role in the inheritance of root length, number of roots/plant, plant height, panicle length, number of filled grain/panicle and grain yield/plant in Giza178 × Sakha106 under both conditions. The studied traits in both crossed populations indicated better genetic advance as they showed advanced qualitative and quantitative characters in rice populations under water deficit condition. Overall, our findings open a new avenue of future phenotypic and genotypic association studies in rice. These insights might be useful to the plant breeders and farmers for developing water deficit tolerant rice cultivars. PeerJ Inc. 2023-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9933770/ /pubmed/36815980 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14833 Text en © 2023 Hassan et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Agricultural Science
Hassan, Hamada M.
Hadifa, Adel A.
El-leithy, Sara A.
Batool, Maria
Sherif, Ahmed
Al-Ashkar, Ibrahim
Ueda, Akihiro
Rahman, Md Atikur
Hossain, Mohammad Anwar
Elsabagh, Ayman
Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title_full Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title_fullStr Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title_full_unstemmed Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title_short Variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
title_sort variable level of genetic dominance controls important agronomic traits in rice populations under water deficit condition
topic Agricultural Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36815980
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14833
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