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result(s) for
"hybrid breeding"
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Genomic Selection for F1 Hybrid Breeding in Strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa)
2021
Cultivated strawberry is the most widely consumed fruit crop in the world, and therefore, many breeding programs are underway to improve its agronomic traits such as fruit quality. Strawberry cultivars were vegetatively propagated through runners and carried a high risk of infection with viruses and insects. To solve this problem, the development of F 1 hybrid seeds has been proposed as an alternative breeding strategy in strawberry. In this study, we conducted a potential assessment of genomic selection (GS) in strawberry F 1 hybrid breeding. A total of 105 inbred lines were developed as candidate parents of strawberry F 1 hybrids. In addition, 275 parental combinations were randomly selected from the 105 inbred lines and crossed to develop test F 1 hybrids for GS model training. These populations were phenotyped for petiole length, leaf area, Brix, fruit hardness, and pericarp color. Whole-genome shotgun sequencing of the 105 inbred lines detected 20,811 single nucleotide polymorphism sites that were provided for subsequent GS analyses. In a GS model construction, inclusion of dominant effects showed a slight advantage in GS accuracy. In the across population prediction analysis, GS models using the inbred lines showed predictability for the test F 1 hybrids and vice versa, except for Brix. Finally, the GS models were used for phenotype prediction of 5,460 possible F 1 hybrids from 105 inbred lines to select F 1 hybrids with high fruit hardness or high pericarp color. These F 1 hybrids were developed and phenotyped to evaluate the efficacy of the GS. As expected, F 1 hybrids that were predicted to have high fruit hardness or high pericarp color expressed higher observed phenotypic values than the F 1 hybrids that were selected for other objectives. Through the analyses in this study, we demonstrated that GS can be applied for strawberry F 1 hybrid breeding.
Journal Article
Proposal of a New Hybrid Breeding Method Based on Genotyping, Inter-Pollination, Phenotyping and Paternity Testing of Selected Elite F1 Hybrids
by
Borut Bohanec
,
Nataša Štajner
,
Jernej Jakše
in
Brassica oleracea
,
Breeding methods
,
Bumblebees
2019
Testing inbred lines for their combining ability is, due to high numbers of line to line testing needed for determination of hybrid performance, the most limiting factor in the F1 hybrid breeding procedure. We propose a novel method of F1 hybrid breeding that enables evaluation of large number of line to line crosses for their hybrid performance. Inbred lines (preferably doubled haploid - DH) are produced from heterozygous populations, genotyped and maintained. A group of lines is inter-pollinated randomly and their progeny examined. To identify elite F1 hybrids, these individual plants are selected by their superior phenotypic characteristics. Finally using paternity testing only of selected hybrids, the origin of paternal lines is revealed. To predict the number of F1 offspring needed in relation to the number of inbred lines being inter-pollinated, a mathematical formula was developed. For instance, using this formula for the inter-pollination of 60 distinct lines, the probability of obtaining all descendants of paternal-parent lines in a maternal-parent row represented at least once is achieved with 420 F1 plants in a row (p = 0.95). In a practical experiment with white cabbage, DH lines were produced using microspore culture; plants were grown to maturity and genotyped at eight polymorphic SSR loci. Two groups of lines (36 and 33 lines per group) were inter-pollinated by two methods, either using cage pollination with bumblebees or using open pollination in isolated field. A total of 9,858 F1 plants were planted and based on their phenotypic characteristics 213 were selected as elite phenotypes. 99 of them were genetically diverse and 5 of them were selected as super elite. Selected plants were analysed by the same SSR markers and the paternal origin of selected F1 plants was determined. Out of 213 selected elite plants 48 were reciprocals thus exhibiting power of selection based on single plant. We demonstrate that this new approach to hybrid development is efficient in white cabbage and we propose breeders to test it in various vegetable and crop species. Moreover, some other aspects of the proposed technique need to be tested and verified both for practical and economic criteria.
Journal Article
Genome Properties and Prospects of Genomic Prediction of Hybrid Performance in a Breeding Program of Maize
2014
Maize (Zea mays L.) serves as model plant for heterosis research and is the crop where hybrid breeding was pioneered. We analyzed genomic and phenotypic data of 1254 hybrids of a typical maize hybrid breeding program based on the important Dent × Flint heterotic pattern. Our main objectives were to investigate genome properties of the parental lines (e.g., allele frequencies, linkage disequilibrium, and phases) and examine the prospects of genomic prediction of hybrid performance. We found high consistency of linkage phases and large differences in allele frequencies between the Dent and Flint heterotic groups in pericentromeric regions. These results can be explained by the Hill–Robertson effect and support the hypothesis of differential fixation of alleles due to pseudo-overdominance in these regions. In pericentromeric regions we also found indications for consistent marker–QTL linkage between heterotic groups. With prediction methods GBLUP and BayesB, the cross-validation prediction accuracy ranged from 0.75 to 0.92 for grain yield and from 0.59 to 0.95 for grain moisture. The prediction accuracy of untested hybrids was highest, if both parents were parents of other hybrids in the training set, and lowest, if none of them were involved in any training set hybrid. Optimizing the composition of the training set in terms of number of lines and hybrids per line could further increase prediction accuracy. We conclude that genomic prediction facilitates a paradigm shift in hybrid breeding by focusing on the performance of experimental hybrids rather than the performance of parental lines in testcrosses.
Journal Article
Genome-based establishment of a high-yielding heterotic pattern for hybrid wheat breeding
by
Li, Zuo
,
Gowda, Manje
,
Longin, C. Friedrich H.
in
Algorithms
,
Biological Sciences
,
Crops, Agricultural
2015
Hybrid breeding promises to boost yield and stability. The single most important element in implementing hybrid breeding is the recognition of a high-yielding heterotic pattern.We have developed a three-step strategy for identifying heterotic patterns for hybrid breeding comprising the following elements. First, the full hybrid performance matrix is compiled using genomic prediction. Second, a high-yielding heterotic pattern is searched based on a developed simulated annealing algorithm. Third, the long-term success of the identified heterotic pattern is assessed by estimating the usefulness, selection limit, and representativeness of the heterotic pattern with respect to a defined base population. This three-step approach was successfully implemented and evaluated using a phenotypic and genomic wheat dataset comprising 1,604 hybrids and their 135 parents. Integration of metabolomic-based prediction was not as powerful as genomic prediction. We show that hybrid wheat breeding based on the identified heterotic pattern can boost grain yield through the exploitation of heterosis and enhance recurrent selection gain. Our strategy represents a key step forward in hybrid breeding and is relevant for self-pollinating crops, which are currently shifting from pure-line to high-yielding and resilient hybrid varieties.
Journal Article
Self-(In)compatibility Systems: Target Traits for Crop-Production, Plant Breeding, and Biotechnology
by
Zuriaga, Elena
,
Cruz-García, Felipe
,
McClure, Bruce
in
Biotechnology
,
Breeding methods
,
Collaboration
2020
Self-incompatibility (SI) mechanisms prevent self-fertilization in flowering plants based on specific discrimination between self- and non-self pollen. Since this trait promotes outcrossing and avoids inbreeding it is a widespread mechanism of controlling sexual plant reproduction. Growers and breeders have effectively exploited SI as a tool for manipulating domesticated crops for thousands of years. However, only within the past thirty years have studies begun to elucidate the underlying molecular features of SI. The specific
-determinants and some modifier factors controlling SI have been identified in the sporophytic system exhibited by
species and in the two very distinct gametophytic systems present in Papaveraceae on one side and in Solanaceae, Rosaceae, and Plantaginaceae on the other. Molecular level studies have enabled SI to SC transitions (and
) to be intentionally manipulated using marker assisted breeding and targeted approaches based on transgene integration, silencing, and more recently CRISPR knock-out of SI-related factors. These scientific advances have, in turn, provided a solid basis to implement new crop production and plant breeding practices. Applications of self-(in)compatibility include widely differing objectives such as crop yield and quality improvement, marker-assisted breeding through SI genotyping, and development of hybrids for overcoming intra- and interspecific reproductive barriers. Here, we review scientific progress as well as patented applications of SI, and also highlight future prospects including further elucidation of SI systems, deepening our understanding of SI-environment relationships, and new perspectives on plant self/non-self recognition.
Journal Article
Controlling diurnal flower‐opening time by manipulating the jasmonate pathway accelerates development of indica–japonica hybrid rice breeding
2024
Summary Inter‐subspecific indica–japonica hybrid rice (Oryza sativa) has the potential for increased yields over traditional indica intra‐subspecies hybrid rice, but limited yield of F1 hybrid seed production (FHSP) hinders the development of indica–japonica hybrid rice breeding. Diurnal flower‐opening time (DFOT) divergence between indica and japonica rice has been a major contributing factor to this issue, but few DFOT genes have been cloned. Here, we found that manipulating the expression of jasmonate (JA) pathway genes can effectively modulate DFOT to improve the yield of FHSP in rice. Treating japonica cultivar Zhonghua 11 (ZH11) with methyl jasmonate (MeJA) substantially advanced DFOT. Furthermore, overexpressing the JA biosynthesis gene OPDA REDUCTASE 7 (OsOPR7) and knocking out the JA inactivation gene CHILLING TOLERANCE 1 (OsHAN1) in ZH11 advanced DFOT by 1‐ and 2‐h respectively; and knockout of the JA signal suppressor genes JASMONATE ZIM‐DOMAIN PROTEIN 7 (OsJAZ7) and OsJAZ9 resulted in 50‐min and 1.5‐h earlier DFOT respectively. The yields of FHSP using japonica male‐sterile lines GAZS with manipulated JA pathway genes were significantly higher than that of GAZS wildtype. Transcriptome analysis, cytological observations, measurements of elastic modulus and determination of cell wall components indicated that the JA pathway could affect the loosening of the lodicule cell walls by regulating their composition through controlling sugar metabolism, which in turn influences DFOT. This research has vital implications for breeding japonica rice cultivars with early DFOT to facilitate indica–japonica hybrid rice breeding.
Journal Article
Two rice receptor-like kinases maintain male fertility under changing temperatures
2017
Plants employ dynamic molecular networks to control development in response to environmental changes, yet the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. Here we report the identification of two rice leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases, Thermo-Sensitive Genic Male Sterile 10 (TMS10) and its close homolog TMS10-Like (TMS10L), which redundantly function in the maintenance of the tapetal cell layer and microspore/pollen viability under normal temperature conditions with TMS10 playing an essential role in higher temperatures (namely, 28 °C). tms10 displays male sterility under high temperatures but male fertility under low temperatures, and the tms10 tms10l double mutant shows complete male sterility under both high and low temperatures. Biochemical and genetic assays indicate that the kinase activity conferred by the intracellular domain of TMS10 is essential for tapetal degeneration and male fertility under high temperatures. Furthermore, indica or japonica rice varieties that contain mutations in TMS10, created by genetic crosses or genome editing, also exhibit thermo-sensitive genic male sterility. These findings demonstrate that TMS10 and TMS10L act as a key switch in postmeiotic tapetal development and pollen development by buffering environmental temperature changes, providing insights into the molecular mechanisms by which plants develop phenotypic plasticity via genotype–environment temperature interaction. TMS10 may be used as a genetic resource for the development of hybrid seed production systems in crops.
Journal Article
HMS1 interacts with HMS1I to regulate very-long-chain fatty acid biosynthesis and the humidity-sensitive genic male sterility in rice (Oryza sativa)
2020
• Environment-sensitive genic male sterility (EGMS) lines are used widely in two-line hybrid breeding in rice (Oryza sativa). At present, photoperiod-sensitive genic male sterility (PGMS) lines and thermo-sensitive genic male sterility (TGMS) lines are predominantly used in two-line hybrid rice, with humidity-sensitive genic male sterility (HGMS) lines rarely being reported.
• Here, it is shown that HUMIDITY-SENSITIVE GENIC MALE STERILITY 1 (HMS1), encoding a β-ketoacyl-CoA synthase, plays key roles in the biosynthesis of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) and HGMS in rice.
• The hms1 mutant displayed decreased seed setting under low humidity, but normal seed setting under high humidity. HMS1 catalyzed the biosynthesis of the C26 and C28 VLCFAs, contributing to the formation of bacula and tryphine in the pollen wall, which protect the pollen from dehydration. Under low-humidity conditions, hms1 pollen showed poor adhesion and reduced germination on the stigmas, which could be rescued by increasing humidity. HMS1-INTERACTING PROTEIN (HMS1I) interacted with HMS1 to coregulate HGMS. Furthermore, both japonica and indica rice varieties with defective HMS1 exhibited HGMS, suggesting that hms1 potentially could be used in hybrid breeding.
• The results herein reveal the novel mechanism of VLCFA-mediated pollen wall formation, which protects pollen from low-humidity stress in rice, and has a potential use in hybrid crop breeding.
Journal Article
Male sterility and hybrid breeding in soybean
by
Fang, Xiaolong
,
Li, Jinhong
,
Zhang, Chunbao
in
Agricultural land
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biotechnology
2023
Hybrid breeding can help us to meet the challenge of feeding a growing world population with limited agricultural land. The demand for soybean is expected to grow; however, the hybrid soybean is still in the process of commercialization even though considerable progress has been made in soybean genome and genetic studies in recent years. Here, we summarize recent advances in male sterility-based breeding programs and the current status of hybrid soybean breeding. A number of male-sterile lines with cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS), genic-controlled photoperiod/thermo-sensitive male sterility, and stable nuclear male sterility (GMS) have been identified in soybean. More than 40 hybrid soybean varieties have been bred using the CMS three-line hybrid system and the cultivation of hybrid soybean is still under way. The key to accelerating hybrid soybean breeding is to increase the out-crossing rate in an economical way. This review outlines current problems with the hybrid soybean breeding systems and explores the current efforts to make the hybrid soybean a commercial success.
Journal Article
Current understanding of male sterility systems in vegetable Brassicas and their exploitation in hybrid breeding
by
Dey, S. S.
,
Kumar, Raj
,
Singh, Saurabh
in
Agriculture
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Brassica
2019
Key message
Overview of the current status of GMS and CMS systems available in
Brassica
vegetables, their molecular mechanism, wild sources of sterile cytoplasm and exploitation of male sterility in hybrid breeding.
The predominantly herbaceous family
Brassicaceae
(crucifers or mustard family) encompasses over 3700 species, and many of them are scientifically and economically important. The genus
Brassica
is an economically important genus within the tribe Brassicaceae that comprises important vegetable, oilseed and fodder crops.
Brassica
vegetables display strong hybrid vigor, and heterosis breeding is the integral part in their improvement. Commercial production of F
1
hybrid seeds in
Brassica
vegetables requires an effective male sterility system. Among the available male sterility systems, cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) is the most widely exploited in
Brassica
vegetables. This system is maternally inherited and studied intensively. A limited number of reports about the genic male sterility (GMS) are available in
Brassica
vegetables. The GMS system is reported to be dominant, recessive and trirecessive in nature in different species. In this review, we discuss the available male sterility systems in
Brassica
vegetables and their potential use in hybrid breeding. The molecular mechanism of mt-CMS and causal mitochondrial genes of CMS has been discussed in detail. Finally, the exploitation of male sterility system in heterosis breeding of
Brassica
vegetables, future prospects and need for further understanding of these systems are highlighted.
Journal Article