Abstract

Drought stress is an important abiotic factor limiting common bean yield, with great impact on the production worldwide. Understanding the genetic basis regulating beans’ yield and seed weight (SW) is a fundamental prerequisite for the development of superior cultivars. The main objectives of this work were to conduct genome-wide marker discovery by genotyping a Mesoamerican panel of common bean germplasm, containing cultivated and landrace accessions of broad origin, followed by the identification of genomic regions associated with productivity under two water regimes using different genome-wide association study (GWAS) approaches. A total of 11,870 markers were genotyped for the 339 genotypes, of which 3,213 were SilicoDArT and 8,657 SNPs derived from DArT and CaptureSeq. The estimated linkage disequilibrium extension, corrected for structure and relatedness (r2sv), was 98.63 and 124.18 kb for landraces and breeding lines, respectively. Germplasm was structured into landraces and lines/cultivars. We carried out GWASs for 100-SW and yield in field environments with and without water stress for 3 consecutive years, using single-, segment-, and gene-based models. Higher number of associations at high stringency was identified for the SW trait under irrigation, totaling ∼185 QTLs for both single- and segment-based, whereas gene-based GWASs showed ∼220 genomic regions containing ∼650 genes. For SW under drought, 18 QTLs were identified for single- and segment-based and 35 genes by gene-based GWASs. For yield, under irrigation, 25 associations were identified, whereas under drought the total was 10 using both approaches. In addition to the consistent associations detected across experiments, these GWAS approaches provided important complementary QTL information (∼221 QTLs; 650 genes; r2 from 0.01% to 32%). Several QTLs were mined within or near candidate genes playing significant role in productivity, providing better understanding of the genetic mechanisms underlying these traits and making available molecular tools to be used in marker-assisted breeding. The findings also allowed the identification of genetic material (germplasm) with better yield performance under drought, promising to a common bean breeding program. Finally, the availability of this highly diverse Mesoamerican panel is of great scientific value for the analysis of any relevant traits in common bean.

Highlights

  • Prolonged drought episodes are critical to plant development and can have devastating impacts on crop productivity worldwide (Eisenstein, 2013; Madadgar et al, 2017)

  • This condition is suitable for drought phenotyping, dry season in Porangatu shows a decrease in accumulated radiation and a higher frequency of lower-than-optimal minimum temperature during the crop cycle (Heinemann et al, 2016), limiting lines/cultivar to express their full yield potential

  • This study reports the use of high-density genotypic data in a panel composed of 339 diverse Mesoamerican common bean accessions structured into Brazilian landraces and lines/cultivars from diverse origins

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Summary

Introduction

Prolonged drought episodes are critical to plant development and can have devastating impacts on crop productivity worldwide (Eisenstein, 2013; Madadgar et al, 2017). Agricultural losses due to drought are associated with both reduced crop areas and production losses, and studying these issues in an attempt to understand their impacts and consequences has become a major challenge for the scientific community (Lesk et al, 2016). In this context, major global changes are taking place in agriculture, such as the development of systems and practices that are more resilient to the impacts of climate change, with less vulnerability and greater adaptability, and the development of agricultural activities with lower greenhouse gas emission, more suitable production levels, improved distribution, less waste, and equitable access, among others (Food and Agriculture Organization [FAO], 2018). Diseases represent the major cause of productivity loss, followed by water stress (WS) (Singh, 1995), which affects approximately 60% of the crop areas and is the result of both drought periods during the crop cycle and irregular rainfall (Graham and Ranalli, 1997; McClean et al, 2011)

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