Improvement of Pre-harvest Sprouting Resistance in Korean japonica Varieties through a Precision Marker-based Breeding

  • Kamal Bhattarai (Rice Breeding Innovation Platform, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)) ;
  • Patricia Izabelle Lopez (Rice Breeding Innovation Platform, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)) ;
  • Sherry Lou Hechanova (Rice Breeding Innovation Platform, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)) ;
  • Ji-Ung Jeung (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • Hyun-Sook Lee (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • Eok-Keun Ahn (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • Ung-Jo Hyun (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • Jong-Hee Lee (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • So-Myeong Lee (National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration (RDA)) ;
  • Jose E. Hernandez (Institute of Crop Science (ICropS), University of the Philippines Los Ba os (UPLB)) ;
  • Sung-Ryul Kim (Rice Breeding Innovation Platform, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI))
  • 발행 : 2022.10.13

초록

Pre-harvest sprouting (PHS) on rice panicles is getting problematic in recent several years in Korea due to climate changes such as high temperature and more frequent typhoons during harvesting season. PHS negatively affects grain quality severely and also yield. Genetic improvement of Korean varieties (Oryza sativa ssp. japonica) through a marker assisted-backcross breeding (MAB) with the known PHS resistant genes must be one of ideal solutions. However, the final breeding products of MAB occasionally exhibit unwanted traits, especially the cross between genetically distant parents. This might be caused by linkage drag and/or presence of the gene-unlinked donor introgressions, resulting that the final products could not be released to the farmers. The major PHS resistance gene, Sdr4 (Seed dormancy 4) originated from an indica cultivar, Kasalath was selected as a donor gene. In order to avoid unexpected phenotypes in the breeding products, we performed a precision marker-based breeding (PMBB) consisting of foreground, recombinant, and background selections (FS, RS, and BS) which aim to develop 'single small introgression lines' (~100 kb introgression). Korean varieties (Ilpum and Gopum) were crossed with Kasalath. We developed Sdr4-allele specific markers for FS and a set of polymorphic flanking markers near the Sdr4 (-350kb and +420kb) for RS. To minimize linkage drag, the small introgression (< 125kb) containing Sdr4 was selected in Ilpum background (BC2F4) through 1st RS with ~1,200 F2 or BC1F2 plants (one side trimmed) and then 2nd RS with ~1,000 progenies from the 1st RS selected plants (another side trimmed). After RS, the selected lines were genotyped by using Infinium 7K SNP chip to detect other donor introgressions and the lines were backcrossed. Currently BS is on-going from the backcross-derived progenies with BS markers to remove residual introgressions. During the PMBB process, genetic effect of Sdr-4-Kasalath allele was confirmed in Ilpum and Gopum backgrounds by PHS phenotyping using the segregating BC2F3 or BC1F4 materials. The Sdr4 PMBB lines in Ilpum background (< 125kb introgression) will be valuable genetic resources to improve PHS resistance in modem popular temperate japonica varieties.

키워드

과제정보

This research was supported by the RDA-IRRI project ("Digital Breeding": Grant number PJ0164052022).