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QTLomics in Soybean: A Way Forward for Translational Genomics and Breeding.
Saturday, 2017/02/11 | 06:03:49

Kumawat G, Gupta S, Ratnaparkhe MB, Maranna S, Satpute GK.

Front Plant Sci. 2016 Dec 21;7:1852. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01852. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Food legumes play an important role in attaining both food and nutritional security along with sustainable agricultural production for the well-being of humans globally. The various traits of economic importance in legume crops are complex and quantitative in nature, which are governed by quantitative trait loci (QTLs). Mapping of quantitative traits is a tedious and costly process, however, a large number of QTLs has been mapped in soybean for various traits albeit their utilization in breeding programmes is poorly reported. For their effective use in breeding programme it is imperative to narrow down the confidence interval of QTLs, to identify the underlying genes, and most importantly allelic characterization of these genes for identifying superior variants. In the field of functional genomics, especially in the identification and characterization of gene responsible for quantitative traits, soybean is far ahead from other legume crops. The availability of genic information about quantitative traits is more significant because it is easy and effective to identify homologs than identifying shared syntenic regions in other crop species. In soybean, genes underlying QTLs have been identified and functionally characterized for phosphorous efficiency, flowering and maturity, pod dehiscence, hard-seededness, α-Tocopherol content, soybean cyst nematode, sudden death syndrome, and salt tolerance. Candidate genes have also been identified for many other quantitative traits for which functional validation is required. Using the sequence information of identified genes from soybean, comparative genomic analysis of homologs in other legume crops could discover novel structural variants and useful alleles for functional marker development. The functional markers may be very useful for molecular breeding in soybean and harnessing benefit of translational research from soybean to other leguminous crops. Thus, soybean crop can act as a model crop for translational genomics and breeding of quantitative traits in legume crops. In this review, we summarize current status of identification and characterization of genes underlying QTLs for various quantitative traits in soybean and their significance in translational genomics and breeding of other legume crops.

 

See: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28066449

 

Figure 1: Map positions (Mbp) of characterized genes and important candidate genes underlying quantitative traits in soybean. Characterized genes are coded in green colour and important candidate genes are coded in red colour. FM, Flowering and maturity; HS, Hard-seededness; IE, Iron efficiency; IF, Isoflavone content; PE, Phosphorous efficiency; PDH, Pod dehiscence; PRR, Phytophthora root rot; Protein, Protein content; RKN, Root knot nematode; Root, Root traits for drought tolerance; SALT, Salt tolerance; SCN, Soybean cyst nematode; SDS, Sudden death syndrome; TP, α-tocopherol content.

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