Abstract

Breeding for salt tolerance using traditional screening and selection methods have been limited by the complex and polygenic nature of salt tolerance trait. This study was designed to evaluate some of the premium Basmati rice varieties for salt tolerance and to characterize genetic diversity among the rice varieties with different adaptations to saline soils using microsatellite (SSR) and ISSR markers. Plants of nine rice varieties including salt tolerant, salt sensitive and traditional Basmati, were grown in hydroponics using Yoshida solution containing 0 (control, pH 5.0) and 30 mM NaCl (Electrical conductivity 4.8 d/S, pH 5.0) and assessed for salinity tolerance on 1–9 scale as per IRRI standard evaluation system using seedling growth parameters, visual salt injuries and Na-K ratio. Physio-morphological studies showed that traditional Basmati rice varieties (Basmati 370 and HBC19) were more sensitive than the salt sensitive control variety, MI-48. SSR as well as ISSR marker systems generated higher levels of polymorphism and could distinguish between all the 9 rice cultivars. A total of 299 (225 polymorphic) and 437 (430 polymorphic) bands were detected using 28 UBC ISSR primers and 100 welldistributed mapped SSR markers, respectively. ISSR and SSR marker data-sets showed moderate levels of positive correlation (Mantel test, r = 0.43). The ISSR and SSR marker data analyzed using clustering algorithms showed two distinct clusters separating the Basmati (Basmati 370, HBC19 and CSR-30) from other non-aromatic indica (IR36, Pokkali, CSR10 and MI-48) rice varieties indicating greater divergence between Basmati and non-aromatic indica rice genotypes. Marker analysis showed a close relationship among the two traditional (Basmati 370 and HBC19) and cross-bred (CSR30) Basmati rice varieties and greater diversity between the two salt-tolerant genotypes, Pokkali and BR4-10.

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