Abstract

AhyHOF1, likely encoding a WRI1 transcription factor, plays critical roles in peanut oil synthesis. Although increasing the oil content of peanut to meet growing demand has long been a primary aim of breeding programs worldwide, the mining of genetic resources to achieve this objective has obviously lagged behind that of other oil crops. In the present study, we developed an advanced recombinant inbred line population containing 192 F9:11 families derived from parents JH5 and KX01-6. We then constructed a high-resolution genetic map covering 3,706.382cM, with an average length of 185.32cM per linkage group, using 2840 polymorphic SNPs. Two stable QTLs, qCOA08_1 and qCOA08_2 having the highest contributions to genetic variation (16.1% and 20.7%, respectively), were simultaneously detected in multiple environments and closely mapped within physical intervals of approximately 2.9Mb and 1.7Mb, respectively, on chromosome A08. In addition, combined analysis of whole-genome and transcriptome resequencing data uncovered a strong candidate gene encoding a WRI1 transcription factor and differentially expressed between the two parents. This gene, designated as High Oil Favorable gene 1 in Arachis hypogaea (AhyHOF1), was hypothesized to play roles in oil accumulation. Examination of near-inbred lines of #AhyHOF1/#Ahyhof1 provided further evidence that AhyHOF1 increases oil content, mainly by affecting the contents of several fatty acids. Taken together, our results provide valuable information for cloning the favorable allele for oil content in peanut. In addition, the closely linked polymorphic SNP markers within qCOA08_1 and qCOA08_2 loci may be useful for accelerating marker-assisted selection breeding of peanut.

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