Abstract

The breeding of agriculturally useful genes from wild crop relatives must take into account recent and future climate change. In Japan, the development of early heading wheat cultivars without the use of any major gene controlling the heading date is desired to avoid overlap of the harvesting time before the rainy season. Here, we backcrossed two early heading lines of a synthetic hexaploid wheat, derived from a crossing between durum wheat and the wild wheat progenitor Aegilops tauschii, with four Japanese elite cultivars to develop early heading lines of bread wheat. In total, nine early heading lines that showed a heading date two to eight days earlier than their parental cultivars in field conditions were selected and established from the selfed progenies of the two- or three-times backcrossed populations. The whole appearance and spike shape of the selected early heading lines looked like their parental wheat cultivars. The mature grains of the selected lines had the parental cultivars' characteristics, although the grains exhibited longer and narrower shapes. RNA sequencing-based genotyping was performed to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms between the selected lines and their parental wheat cultivars, which revealed the chromosomal regions transmitted from the parental synthetic wheat to the selected lines. The introgression regions could shorten wheat heading date, and their chromosomal positions were dependent on the backcrossed wheat cultivars. Therefore, early heading synthetic hexaploid wheat is useful for fine-tuning of the heading date through introgression of Ae. tauschii chromosomal regions.

Highlights

  • Current and future climate change requires more efficient utilization of agriculturally useful genes that are found in the wild relatives of crops [1,2]

  • Two early heading synthetic wheat lines, Ldn/PI476874 and Ldn/AT47, were backcrossed with the four Japanese wheat cultivars, and the early heading plants were selected in the BC2 and BC3 populations for backcrossing with the four cultivars

  • The selected early heading lines could be useful for further Japanese bread wheat breeding due to their early heading date and increased thousand-grain weight as derived from the parental synthetic hexaploid wheat lines

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Summary

Introduction

Current and future climate change requires more efficient utilization of agriculturally useful genes that are found in the wild relatives of crops [1,2]. Heading wheat lines with introgression of chromosomal segments from wild progenitor within the paper and its supporting information file. Files containing raw sequence data for the RNA sequencing are available in the sequence read archive of DDBJ (accession number DRA009228)

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