4.7 Article

The chickpea WIP2 gene underlying a major QTL contributes to lateral root development

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erad171

Keywords

CaWIP2; Cicer arietinum; lateral root; marker; QTL; simple sequence repeat (SSR)

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This study identified a gene marker (CaWIP2) for regulating lateral root count in chickpea, which can be utilized to develop drought-tolerant, high-yielding cultivars.
Chickpea CaWIP2, encoding a C2H2 zinc finger protein, resides within a major quantitative trait locus governing lateral root number, and is required for lateral root primordia formation. Lateral roots are a major component of root system architecture, and lateral root count (LRC) positively contributes to yield under drought in chickpea. To understand the genetic regulation of LRC, a biparental mapping population derived from two chickpea accessions having contrasting LRCs was genotyped by sequencing, and phenotyped to map four major quantitative trait loci (QTLs) contributing to 13-32% of the LRC trait variation. A single- nucleotide polymorphism tightly linked to the locus contributing to highest trait variation was located on the coding region of a gene (CaWIP2), orthologous to NO TRANSMITTING TRACT/WIP domain protein 2 (NTT/WIP2) gene of Arabidopsis thaliana. A polymorphic simple sequence repeat (SSR) in the CaWIP2 promoter showed differentiation between low versus high LRC parents and mapping individuals, suggesting its utility for marker-assisted selection. CaWIP2 promoter showed strong expression in chickpea apical root meristem and lateral root primordia. Expression of CaWIP2 under its native promoter in the Arabidopsis wip2wip4wip5 mutant rescued its rootless phenotype to produce more lateral roots than the wild-type plants, and led to formation of amyloplasts in the columella. CaWIP2 expression also induced the expression of genes that regulate lateral root emergence. Our study identified a gene-based marker for LRC which will be useful for developing drought-tolerant, high-yielding chickpea varieties.

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