Abstract

BackgroundAlthough modern soybean cultivars feature yellow seed coats, with the only color variation found at the hila, the ancestral condition is black seed coats. Both seed coat and hila coloration are due to the presence of phenylpropanoid pathway derivatives, principally anthocyanins. The genetics of soybean seed coat and hilum coloration were first investigated during the resurgence of genetics during the 1920s, following the rediscovery of Mendel's work. Despite the inclusion of this phenotypic marker into the extensive genetic maps developed for soybean over the last twenty years, the genetic basis behind the phenomenon of brown seed coats (the R locus) has remained undetermined until now.ResultsIn order to identify the gene responsible for the r gene effect (brown hilum or seed coat color), we utilized bulk segregant analysis and identified recombinant lines derived from a population segregating for two phenotypically distinct alleles of the R locus. Fine mapping was accelerated through use of a novel, bioinformatically determined set of Simple Sequence Repeat (SSR) markers which allowed us to delimit the genomic region containing the r gene to less than 200 kbp, despite the use of a mapping population of only 100 F6 lines. Candidate gene analysis identified a loss of function mutation affecting a seed coat-specific expressed R2R3 MYB transcription factor gene (Glyma09g36990) as a strong candidate for the brown hilum phenotype. We observed a near perfect correlation between the mRNA expression levels of the functional R gene candidate and an UDP-glucose:flavonoid 3-O-glucosyltransferase (UF3GT) gene, which is responsible for the final step in anthocyanin biosynthesis. In contrast, when a null allele of Glyma09g36990 is expressed no upregulation of the UF3GT gene was found.ConclusionsWe discovered an allelic series of four loss of function mutations affecting our R locus gene candidate. The presence of any one of these mutations was perfectly correlated with the brown seed coat/hilum phenotype in a broadly distributed survey of soybean cultivars, barring the presence of the epistatic dominant I allele or gray pubescence, both of which can mask the effect of the r allele, resulting in yellow or buff hila. These findings strongly suggest that loss of function for one particular seed coat-expressed R2R3 MYB gene is responsible for the brown seed coat/hilum phenotype in soybean.

Highlights

  • Modern soybean cultivars feature yellow seed coats, with the only color variation found at the hila, the ancestral condition is black seed coats

  • Bulk Segregant Analysis In order to identify the gene responsible for the r locus effect, we initially utilized the bulk segregant analysis (BSA) [40] method on Recombinant Inbred Line (RIL) from a population derived from the cross of soybean cultivar Jake with the Plant Introduction line (PI) 283327 which had segregated for the R gene alleles with the Universal Soybean Linkage Panel (USLP) array [34]

  • The reference gene used to normalize data was CONS6 [39] and raw Ct values were first applied to efficiency curves developed for each primer set utilizing Williams 82 genomic DNA, normalized to the expression of Identification of lines featuring recombination events within the delimited R region Three primer pairs from the novel Simple Sequence Repeat (SSR) set

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Summary

Introduction

Modern soybean cultivars feature yellow seed coats, with the only color variation found at the hila, the ancestral condition is black seed coats. Both seed coat and hila coloration are due to the presence of phenylpropanoid pathway derivatives, principally anthocyanins. Soybean is relatively new to western agriculture, it has Genetics of soybean seed coloration The visual appearance of the soybean seed itself has been altered as a result of domestication: All Glycine soja accessions in the USDA GRIN germplasm collection possess black seed coats, whereas the majority of Glycine max germplasm (12880/18585 Soybean entries, accessed 06/07/2011) possess yellow seed coats. A small market exists for black soybeans, all modern high yielding cultivars feature yellow seed coats, with a range of hila colors present (brown, black, imperfect black, buff, yellow). Other loci with minor effects have been described, but these have not been mapped and the genetics have been incompletely discerned [6,7,8]

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