4.7 Article

Lettuce, a shallow-rooted crop, and Lactuca serriola, its wild progenitor, differ at QTL determining root architecture and deep soil water exploitation

Journal

THEORETICAL AND APPLIED GENETICS
Volume 101, Issue 7, Pages 1066-1073

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s001220051581

Keywords

root architecture; soil water; quantitative trait loci; crop domestication; AFLP

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Wild plant species are often adapted to more stressful environments than their cultivated relatives. Roots are critical in exploiting soil resources that enable plants to withstand environmental stresses, but they are difficult to study. Cultivated lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) and wild L. serriola L. differ greatly in both shoot and root characteristics. Approximately 100 F-2:3 families derived from an interspecific cross were evaluated in greenhouse and field experiments. Ln the greenhouse, root traits (taproot length, number of laterals emerging from the taproot, and biomass) and shoot biomass were measured 4 weeks after planting. In the field, plants were grown for 9 weeks (close to harvest maturity of the cultivated parent); mild drought stress was induced by withholding water for 1 week, and gravimetric moisture of soil was then determined for five depth increments between 0-100 cm. The families were genotyped using codominantly scored AFLP markers distributed throughout the genome. Composite interval mapping was used to analyze marker-trait associations. Quantitative trait loci were identified for differences between wild and cultivated lettuce for root architectural traits and water acquisition. Thirteen QTL were detected that each accounted for 28-83% of the phenotypic variation. The loci for taproot length (i.e., cm taproot length g(-1) plant biomass) and the ability to extract water from deep in the soil profile co-localized in the genome. These coincident loci were identified in separate experiments. The wild L. serriola is therefore a potential source of agriculturally important alleles to optimize resource acquisition by cultivated lettuce, thereby minimizing water and fertilizer inputs and ultimately enhancing water quality.

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