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Combinations of the Ghd7 , Ghd8 and Hd1 genes largely define the ecogeographical adaptation and yield potential of cultivated rice
Author(s) -
Zhang Jia,
Zhou Xiangchun,
Yan Wenhao,
Zhang Zhanyi,
Lu Li,
Han Zhongmin,
Zhao Hu,
Liu Haiyang,
Song Pan,
Hu Yong,
Shen Guojing,
He Qin,
Guo Sibin,
Gao Guoqing,
Wang Gongwei,
Xing Yongzhong
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/nph.13538
Subject(s) - germplasm , biology , adaptation (eye) , cultivar , allele , gene , genetics , agronomy , neuroscience
Summary Rice cultivars have been adapted to favorable ecological regions and cropping seasons. Although several heading date genes have separately made contributions to this adaptation, the roles of gene combinations are still unclear. We employed a map‐based cloning approach to isolate a heading date gene, which coordinated the interaction between Ghd7 and Ghd8 to greatly delay rice heading. We resequenced these three genes in a germplasm collection to analyze natural variation. Map‐based cloning demonstrated that the gene largely affecting the interaction between Ghd7 and Ghd8 was Hd1 . Natural variation analysis showed that a combination of loss‐of‐function alleles of Ghd7 , Ghd8 and Hd1 contributes to the expansion of rice cultivars to higher latitudes; by contrast, a combination of pre‐existing strong alleles of Ghd7 , Ghd8 and functional Hd1 (referred as SSF ) is exclusively found where ancestral Asian cultivars originated. Other combinations have comparatively larger favorable ecological scopes and acceptable grain yield. Our results indicate that the combinations of Ghd7 , Ghd8 and Hd1 largely define the ecogeographical adaptation and yield potential in rice cultivars. Breeding varieties with the SSF combination are recommended for tropical regions to fully utilize available energy and light resources and thus produce greater yields.