4.6 Article

Improving Agricultural Traits While Maintaining High Resistant Starch Content in Rice

Journal

RICE
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s12284-022-00573-5

Keywords

Amylopectin; Amylose; Backcrossing; Endosperm starch; Resistant starch; Rice (Oryza sativa); Starch branching enzyme

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Research Promotion Program for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Food Industry [25033AB, 28029C]
  2. President's Funds of Akita Prefectural University [15J40176, JP18J40020]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16K18571, JP18K14438, 20K05961, 19H01608]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20K05961, 19H01608, 16K18571] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study showed that backcrossing high RS rice lines with elite rice cultivars can increase seed weight without compromising RS content. The introduced genetic loci may enhance seed length and width, and promote early flowering for optimal temperature during RS biosynthesis.
Background Resistant starch (RS) is beneficial for human health. Loss of starch branching enzyme IIb (BEIIb) increases the proportion of amylopectin long chains, which greatly elevates the RS content. Although high RS content cereals are desired, an increase in RS content is often accompanied by a decrease in seed weight. To further increase the RS content, genes encoding active-type starch synthase (SS) IIa, which elongates amylopectin branches, and high expression-type granule-bound SSI (GBSSI), which synthesizes amylose, were introduced into the be2b mutant rice. This attempt increased the RS content, but further improvement of agricultural traits was required because of a mixture of indica and japonica rice phonotype, such as different grain sizes, flowering times, and seed shattering traits. In the present study, the high RS lines were backcrossed with an elite rice cultivar, and the starch properties of the resultant high-yielding RS lines were analyzed. Results The seed weight of high RS lines was greatly improved after backcrossing, increasing up to 190% compared with the seed weight before backcrossing. Amylopectin structure, gelatinization temperature, and RS content of high RS lines showed almost no change after backcrossing. High RS lines contained longer amylopectin branch chains than the wild type, and lines with active-type SSIIa contained a higher proportion of long amylopectin chains compared with the lines with less active-SSIIa, and thus showed higher gelatinization temperature. Although the RS content of rice varied with the cooking method, those of high RS lines remained high after backcrossing. The RS contents of cooked rice of high RS lines were high (27-35%), whereas that of the elite parental rice was considerably low (< 0.7%). The RS contents of lines with active-type SSIIa and high-level GBSSI expression in be2b or be2b ss3a background were higher than those of lines with less-active SSIIa. Conclusions The present study revealed that backcrossing high RS rice lines with elite rice cultivars could increase the seed weight, without compromising the RS content. It is likely that backcrossing introduced loci enhancing seed length and width as well as loci promoting early flowering for ensuring an optimum temperature during RS biosynthesis.

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