Qian Shen, Siping Zhang, Changwei Ge, Shaodong Liu, Jing Chen, Ruihua Liu, Huijuan Ma, Meizhen Song & Chaoyou Pang
Theoretical and Applied Genetics February 2023; vol. 136: (4) Published: 21 February 2023
Figure: Cold stress tolerance genes of the wild cotton species Gossipium turberi (William Salter 2019)
Key message
Genomic analysis of upland cotton revealed that cold tolerance was associated with ecological distribution. GhSAL1 on chromosome D09 negatively regulated cold tolerance of upland cotton.
Abstract
Cotton can undergo low-temperature stress at the seedling emergence stage, which adversely affects growth and yield; however, the regulatory mechanism underlying cold tolerance remains nebulous. Here, we analyze the phenotypic and physiological parameters in 200 accessions from 5 ecological distributions under constant chilling (CC) and diurnal variation of chilling (DVC) stresses at the seedling emergence stage. All accessions were clustered into four groups, of which Group IV, with most germplasms from the northwest inland region (NIR), had better phenotypes than Groups I–III under the two kinds of chilling stresses. A total of 575 significantly associated single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) were identified, and 35 stable genetic quantitative trait loci (QTL) were obtained, of which 5 were associated with traits under CC and DVC stress, respectively, while the remaining 25 were co-associated. The accumulation of dry weight (DW) of seedling was associated with the flavonoid biosynthesis process regulated by Gh_A10G0500. The emergence rate (ER), DW, and total length of seedling (TL) under CC stress were associated with the SNPs variation of Gh_D09G0189 (GhSAL1). GhSAL1HapB was the elite haplotype, which increased ER, DW, and TL by 19.04%, 11.26%, and 7.69%, respectively, compared with that of GhSAL1HapA. The results of virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) experiment and determination of metabolic substrate content preliminarily illustrated that GhSAL1 negatively regulated cotton cold tolerance through IP3-Ca2+ signaling pathway. The elite haplotypes and candidate genes identified in this study could be used to improve cold tolerance at the seedling emergence stage in future upland cotton breeding.
See https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00122-023-04317-x
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