Agronomy (Mar 2024)

Incorporation of Photoperiod Insensitivity and High-Yield Genes into an Indigenous Rice Variety from Myanmar, Paw San Hmwe

  • Khin Thanda Win,
  • Moe Moe Hlaing,
  • Aye Lae Lae Hlaing,
  • Zin Thu Zar Maung,
  • Khaing Nwe Oo,
  • Thinzar Nwe,
  • Sandar Moe,
  • Thein Lin,
  • Ohm Mar Saw,
  • Thado Aung,
  • Mai Swe Swe,
  • San Mar Lar,
  • Ei Shwe Sin,
  • Yoshiyuki Yamagata,
  • Enrique R. Angeles,
  • Yuji Matsue,
  • Hideshi Yasui,
  • Min San Thein,
  • Naing Kyi Win,
  • Motoyuki Ashikari,
  • Atsushi Yoshimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14030632
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 632

Abstract

Read online

Paw San Hmwe (PSH) is an indigenous rice variety from Myanmar with a good taste, a pleasant fragrance, and excellent elongation ability during cooking. However, its low yield potential and strong photoperiod sensitivity reduce its productivity, and it is vulnerable to climate changes during growth. To improve the photoperiod insensitivity, yield, and plant stature of PSH, the high-yield genes Grain number 1a (Gn1a) and Wealthy Farmer’s Panicle (WFP), together with the photoperiod insensitivity trait, were introgressed into PSH via marker-assisted backcross breeding and phenotype selection. For the photoperiod insensitivity trait, phenotypic selection was performed under long-day conditions during the dry season. After foreground selection of Gn1a and WFP via simple sequence repeat genotyping, genotyping-by-sequencing was conducted to validate the introgression of target genes and determine the recurrent parent genome recovery of the selected lines. The improved lines were insensitive to photoperiod, and the Gn1a and WFP introgression lines showed significantly higher numbers of primary panicle branches and spikelets per panicle than the recurrent parent, with comparative similarity in cooking and eating qualities. This study successfully improved PSH by decreasing its photoperiod sensitivity and introducing high-yield genes via marker-assisted selection. The developed lines can be used for crop rotation and double-season cropping of better-quality rice.

Keywords