Abstract

Sugarcane is an economically important commercial crop which provides raw material for the production of sugar, jaggery, bioethanol, biomass and other by-products. Sugarcane breeding till today heavily relies on conventional breeding approaches which is time consuming, laborious and costly. Integration of marker-assisted selection (MAS) in sugarcane genetic improvement programs for difficult to select traits like sucrose content, resistance to pests and diseases and tolerance to abiotic stresses will accelerate varietal development. In the present study, association mapping approach was used to identify QTLs and genes associated with sucrose and other important yield-contributing traits. A mapping panel of 110 diverse sugarcane genotypes and 148 microsatellite primers were used for structured association mapping study. An optimal subpopulation number (ΔK) of 5 was identified by structure analysis. GWAS analysis using TASSEL identified a total of 110 MTAs which were localized into 27 QTLs by GLM and MLM (Q + K, PC + K) approaches. Among the 24 QTLs sequenced, 12 were able to identify potential candidate genes, viz., starch branching enzyme, starch synthase 4, sugar transporters and G3P-DH related to carbohydrate metabolism and hormone pathway-related genes ethylene insensitive 3-like 1, reversion to ethylene sensitive1-like, and auxin response factor associated to juice quality- and yield-related traits. Six markers, NKS 5_185, SCB 270_144, SCB 370_256, NKS 46_176 and UGSM 648_245, associated with juice quality traits and marker SMC31CUQ_304 associated with NMC were validated and identified as significantly associated to the traits by one-way ANOVA analysis. In conclusion, 24 potential QTLs identified in the present study could be used in sugarcane breeding programs after further validation in larger population. The candidate genes from carbohydrate and hormone response pathway presented in this study could be manipulated with genome editing approaches to further improve sugarcane crop.

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