Frontiers in Plant Science (Apr 2024)

Genome-wide association study of plant color in Sorghum bicolor

  • Lihua Wang,
  • Lihua Wang,
  • Wenmiao Tu,
  • Wenmiao Tu,
  • Peng Jin,
  • Peng Jin,
  • Yanlong Liu,
  • Yanlong Liu,
  • Junli Du,
  • Junli Du,
  • Jiacheng Zheng,
  • Jiacheng Zheng,
  • Yi-Hong Wang,
  • Jieqin Li,
  • Jieqin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2024.1320844
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionSorghum plant color is the leaf sheath/leaf color and is associated with seed color, tannin and phenol content, head blight disease incidence, and phytoalexin production.ResultsIn this study, we evaluated plant color of the sorghum mini core collection by scoring leaf sheath/leaf color at maturity as tan, red, or purple across three testing environments and performed genome-wide association mapping (GWAS) with 6,094,317 SNPs markers.Results and DiscussionEight loci, one each on chromosomes 1, 2, 4, and 6 and two on chromosomes 5 and 9, were mapped. All loci contained one to three candidate genes. In qPC5-1, Sobic.005G165632 and Sobic.005G165700 were located in the same linkage disequilibrium (LD) block. In qPC6, Sobic.006G149650 and Sobic.006G149700 were located in the different LD block. The single peak in qPC6 covered one gene, Sobic.006G149700, which was a senescence regulator. We found a loose correlation between the degree of linkage and tissue/organ expression of the underlying genes possibly related to the plant color phenotype. Allele analysis indicated that none of the linked SNPs can differentiate between red and purple accessions whereas all linked SNPs can differentiate tan from red/purple accessions. The candidate genes and SNP markers may facilitate the elucidation of plant color development as well as molecular plant breeding.

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