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Genetics of chilling response at early growth stage in rice: a recessive gene for tolerance and importance of acclimation.

Akhil Ranjan BaruahHiroaki BannaiYan MeijaAyumi KimuraHaruka UenoYohei KoideYuji KishimaJiwan PaltaJun KasugaMasayuki P YamamotoKazumitsu Onishi
Published in: AoB PLANTS (2023)
Low-temperature adaptation in rice is mediated by the ability of a genotype to tolerate chilling temperatures. A genetic locus on chromosome 11 was analysed for chilling tolerance at the plumule stage in rice. The tolerant allele of A58, a japonica landrace in Japan, was inherited as a recessive gene ( ctp-1 A58 ), whereas the susceptible alleles from wild rice ( Ctp-1 W107 ) and modern variety ( Ctp-1 HY ) were the dominant genes. Another recessive tolerant allele ( ctp-1 Silewah ) was found in a tropical japonica variety (Silewah). Fine-mapping revealed that a candidate gene for the ctp-1 locus encoded a protein similar to the nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat (NLR) protein, in which frameshift mutation by a 73 bp-deletion might confer chilling tolerance in ctp-1 A58 . Analysis of near-isogenic lines demonstrated that ctp-1 A58 imparted tolerance effects only at severe chilling temperatures of 0.5 °C and 2 °C, both at plumule and seedling stages. Chilling acclimation treatments at a wide range of temperatures (8 °C-16 °C) for 72 h concealed the susceptible phenotype of Ctp-1 W107 and Ctp-1 HY . Furthermore, short-term acclimation treatment of 12 h at 8 °C was enough to be fully acclimated. These results suggest that the NLR gene induces a susceptible response upon exposure to severe chilling stress, however, another interacting gene(s) for acclimation response could suppress the maladaptive phenotype caused by the Ctp-1 allele. This study provides new insights for the adaptation and breeding of rice in a low-temperature environment.
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