Abstract

Tobacco bacterial wilt (TBW) is a devastating soil-borne disease threatening the yield and quality of tobacco. However, its genetic foundations are not fully understood. In this study, we identified 126,602 high-quality single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 94 tobacco accessions using genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) and a 94.56 KB linkage disequilibrium (LD) decay rate for candidate gene selection. The population structure analysis revealed two subpopulations with 37 and 57 tobacco accessions. Four multi-locus genome-wide association study (ML-GWAS) approaches identified 142 quantitative trait nucleotides (QTNs) in E1–E4 and the best linear unbiased prediction (BLUP), explaining 0.49–22.52% phenotypic variance. Of these, 38 novel stable QTNs were identified across at least two environments/methods, and their alleles showed significant TBW-DI differences. The number of superior alleles associated with TBW resistance for each accession ranged from 4 to 24; eight accessions had more than 18 superior alleles. Based on TBW-resistant alleles, the five best cross combinations were predicted, including MC133 × Ruyuan No. 1 and CO258 × ROX28. We identified 52 candidate genes around 38 QTNs related to TBW resistance based on homologous functional annotation and KEGG enrichment analysis, e.g., CYCD3;2, BSK1, Nitab4.5_0000641g0050, Nitab4.5_0000929g0030. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive study to identify QTNs, superior alleles, and their candidate genes for breeding TBW-resistant tobacco varieties. The results provide further insight into the genetic architecture, marker-assisted selection, and functional genomics of TBW resistance, improving future breeding efforts to increase crop productivity.

Highlights

  • Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.; 2n = 48) is an important cash crop in many countries, including China, and a valuable model system in genetic engineering and molecular biology

  • The heritability estimates for Tobacco bacterial wilt (TBW)-DI in the four environments ranged from 61.37 to 81.36%, using residual and polygenic variances (Table 1), indicating that genetic effects play a significant role in TBWDI variation

  • We demonstrated that TBW resistance is genetically complex

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Summary

Introduction

Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.; 2n = 48) is an important cash crop in many countries, including China, and a valuable model system in genetic engineering and molecular biology. Tobacco bacterial wilt (TBW) caused by Ralstonia solanacearum is a destructive soil-borne disease in many regions worldwide (Nishi et al, 2003; Lan et al, 2014; Drake-Stowe et al, 2017). TBW is prevalent in tobacco-growing countries with moist tropical or warm-temperate climates (Denny, 2006). Several methods, including crop rotation and soil fumigation, can reduce some economic losses from the disease; none provide sufficient protection (Nishi et al, 2003; Lan et al, 2014)

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