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High-resolution genome-wide association study pinpoints metal transporter and chelator genes involved in the genetic control of element levels in maize grain

Di Wu, R. Tanaka, Xiaowei Li, Guillaume P. Ramstein, Suong Cu, John P. Hamilton, C. Robin Buell, James Stangoulis, Torbert Rocheford, Michael A. Gore

2021G3 Genes Genomes Genetics38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite its importance to plant function and human health, the genetics underpinning element levels in maize grain remain largely unknown. Through a genome-wide association study in the maize Ames panel of nearly 2,000 inbred lines that was imputed with ∼7.7 million SNP markers, we investigated the genetic basis of natural variation for the concentration of 11 elements in grain. Novel associations were detected for the metal transporter genes rte2 (rotten ear2) and irt1 (iron-regulated transporter1) with boron and nickel, respectively. We also further resolved loci that were previously found to be associated with one or more of five elements (copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, and/or zinc), with two metal chelator and five metal transporter candidate causal genes identified. The nas5 (nicotianamine synthase5) gene involved in the synthesis of nicotianamine, a metal chelator, was found associated with both zinc and iron and suggests a common genetic basis controlling the accumulation of these two metals in the grain. Furthermore, moderate predictive abilities were obtained for the 11 elemental grain phenotypes with two whole-genome prediction models: Bayesian Ridge Regression (0.33-0.51) and BayesB (0.33-0.53). Of the two models, BayesB, with its greater emphasis on large-effect loci, showed ∼4-10% higher predictive abilities for nickel, molybdenum, and copper. Altogether, our findings contribute to an improved genotype-phenotype map for grain element accumulation in maize.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGeneCandidate geneGeneticsGenome-wide association studyGenomeGenotypeSingle-nucleotide polymorphismPlant Micronutrient Interactions and EffectsTrace Elements in HealthGenetics and Plant Breeding
High-resolution genome-wide association study pinpoints metal transporter and chelator genes involved in the genetic control of element levels in maize grain | Litcius