4.6 Article

Dissection of Maize Drought Tolerance at the Flowering Stage Using Genome-Wide Association Studies

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13040564

Keywords

maize; drought tolerance; flowering stage; GWAS

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32072067, 31801378]
  2. Joint Research Program of Long Ping High-Tech with BRI-CAAS
  3. 2020 Research Program of Sanya Yazhou Bay Science and Technology City [SKJC-2020-02-005]

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Drought is a critical factor affecting maize production, and this study identified candidate genes associated with traits related to drought tolerance in maize. These findings provide insights into the genetic basis of drought tolerance and can facilitate drought-tolerant maize breeding.
Drought is one of the most critical environmental factors constraining maize production. When it occurs at the flowering stage, serious yield losses are caused, and often, the damage is irretrievable. In this study, anthesis to silk interval (ASI), plant height (PH), and ear biomass at the silking date (EBM) of 279 inbred lines were studied under both water-stress (WS) and well-water (WW) field conditions, for three consecutive years. Averagely, ASI was extended by 25.96%, EBM was decreased by 17.54%, and the PH was reduced by 12.47% under drought stress. Genome-wide association studies were carried out using phenotypic values under WS, WW, and drought-tolerance index (WS-WW or WS/WW) and applying a mixed linear model that controls both population structure and relative kinship. In total, 71, 159, and 21 SNPs, located in 32, 59, and 12 genes, were significantly (P < 10(-5)) associated with ASI, EBM, and PH, respectively. Only a few overlapped candidate genes were found to be associated with the same drought-related traits under different environments, for example, ARABIDILLO 1, glycoprotein, Tic22-like, and zinc-finger family protein for ASI; 26S proteasome non-ATPase and pyridoxal phosphate transferase for EBM; 11-ss-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, uncharacterised, Leu-rich repeat protein kinase, and SF16 protein for PH. Furthermore, most candidate genes were revealed to be drought-responsive in an association panel. Meanwhile, the favourable alleles/key variations were identified with a haplotype analysis. These candidate genes and their key variations provide insight into the genetic basis of drought tolerance, especially for the female inflorescence, and will facilitate drought-tolerant maize breeding.

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