4.7 Article

Candidate genes underlying QTL for flowering time and their interactions in a wide spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cross

Journal

CROP JOURNAL
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 862-872

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cj.2020.07.008

Keywords

Barley; Flowering; HvELF3; HvCEN; HvFT1

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [AGL2010-21929, AGL2013-48756-R]
  2. Agencia Estatal de Investigacion
  3. European Regional Development Fund [AGL2016-80967-R]
  4. Government of Aragon [A08_20R]

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This study investigated the genetic control of flowering time in a biparental population of spring barley, identifying five QTL and revealing the significant contribution of specific alleles in the parents towards early flowering. The results suggest diverse aspects of the flowering-time pathway that have been manipulated in the two cultivars, with epistatic interactions between flowering-time QTL or candidate genes observed both in field data and under controlled conditions.
Response to vernalization and photoperiod are the main determinants controlling the time to flowering in temperate cereals. While the individual genes that determine a plant's response to these environmental signals are well characterized, the combinatorial effect on flowering time of allelic variants for multiple genes remains unresolved. This study investigated the genetic control of flowering-time in a biparental population of spring barley, derived from a wide cross between a late-flowering European and an early-flowering North-American cultivar. While the major flowering time genes are not segregating in the Beka x Logan cross, large variation in flowering was observed. We identified five QTL, with both parents found to contribute early alleles. The catalog of QTL discovered aligns with several candidate genes affecting flowering time in barley. The combination of particular alleles at HvCEN, HvELF3 and HvFTI in Logan are responsible for the earliness of this cultivar. Interestingly, earliness for flowering could be further enhanced, with Beka found to contribute three early alleles, including a QTL colocating with a HvFD-like gene, suggesting that there are diverse aspects of the flowering-time pathway that have been manipulated in these two cultivars. Epistatic interactions between flowering-time QTL or candidate genes were observed in field data and confirmed under controlled conditions. The results of this study link photoperiod-dependent flowering-time genes with earliness per se genes into a single model, thus providing a unique framework that can be used by geneticists and breeders to optimize flowering time in barley. (C) 2021 Crop Science Society of China and Institute of Crop Science, CAAS. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.

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