Global food demand, climatic variability and reduced land availability are driving the need for domestication of new crop species. The accelerated domestication of a rice-like Australian dryland polyploid grass, Microlaena stipoides (Poaceae), was targeted using chemical mutagenesis in conjunction with high throughput sequencing of genes for key domestication traits. While M. stipoides has previously been identified as having potential as a new grain crop for human consumption, only a limited understanding of its genetic diversity and breeding system was available to aid the domestication process. Next generation sequencing of deeply-pooled target amplicons estimated allelic diversity of a selected base population at 14.3 SNP/Mb and identified novel, putatively mutation-induced polymorphisms at about 2.4 mutations/Mb. A 97% lethal dose (LD97) of ethyl methanesulfonate treatment was applied without inducing sterility in this polyploid species. Forward and reverse genetic screens identified beneficial alleles for the domestication trait, seed-shattering. Unique phenotypes observed in the M2 population suggest the potential for rapid accumulation of beneficial traits without recourse to a traditional cross-breeding strategy. This approach may be applicable to other wild species, unlocking their potential as new food, fibre and fuel crops.
Journal article
High-throughput sequencing and mutagenesis to accelerate the domestication of microlaena stipoides as a new food crop
PLoS One, Vol.8(12, e82641)
2013
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- High-throughput sequencing and mutagenesis to accelerate the domestication of microlaena stipoides as a new food crop
- Creators
- Frances M Shapter - Southern Cross UniversityMichael Cross - Southern Cross UniversityGary A Ablett - Southern Cross UniversitySylvia Malory - Southern Cross UniversityI H ChiversGraham J King - Southern Cross UniversityR J Henry - University of Queensland
- Publication Details
- PLoS One, Vol.8(12, e82641)
- Identifiers
- 1718; 991012820338902368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Science and Engineering; Science; Southern Cross Plant Science
- Resource Type
- Journal article