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Genome-wide association analysis uncovers the genetic architecture of tradeoff between flowering date and yield components in sesame

Idan Sabag, Gota Morota, Zvi Peleg

2021BMC Plant Biology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Unrevealing the genetic makeup of crop morpho-agronomic traits is essential for improving yield quality and sustainability. Sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) is one of the oldest oil-crops in the world. Despite its economic and agricultural importance, it is an 'orphan crop-plant' that has undergone limited modern selection, and, as a consequence preserved wide genetic diversity. Here we established a new sesame panel (SCHUJI) that contains 184 genotypes representing wide phenotypic variation and is geographically distributed. We harnessed the natural variation of this panel to perform genome-wide association studies for morpho-agronomic traits under the Mediterranean climate conditions. RESULTS: Field-based phenotyping of the SCHUJI panel across two seasons exposed wide phenotypic variation for all traits. Using 20,294 single-nucleotide polymorphism markers, we detected 50 genomic signals associated with these traits. Major genomic region on LG2 was associated with flowering date and yield-related traits, exemplified the key role of the flowering date on productivity. CONCLUSIONS: Our results shed light on the genetic architecture of flowering date and its interaction with yield components in sesame and may serve as a basis for future sesame breeding programs in the Mediterranean basin.

Topics & Concepts

SesamumBiologyGenetic architectureMediterranean BasinBiotechnologyCropGenetic variationGenetic diversityGenome-wide association studyGenetic associationDomesticationMediterranean climateSingle-nucleotide polymorphismAgronomyGenotypeQuantitative trait locusGeneticsGeneEcologyDemographySociologyPopulationSesame and Sesamin ResearchSunflower and Safflower CultivationSoybean genetics and cultivation