Development of novel gene-based markers for waxy1 gene and their validation for exploitation in molecular breeding for enhancement of amylopectin in maize.
Zahirul Alam TalukderRashmi ChhabraVignesh MuthusamyRajkumar U ZunjareFiroz HossainPublished in: Journal of applied genetics (2023)
Waxy corn possessing high amylopectin is widely employed as an industrial product. Traditional corn contains ~ 70-75% amylopectin, whereas waxy corn with the mutant waxy1 (wx1) gene possesses ~ 95-100% amylopectin. Marker-assisted breeding can greatly hasten the transfer of the wx1 allele into normal corn. However, the available gene-based marker(s) for wx1 are not always polymorphic between recipient and donor parents, thereby causing a considerable delay in the molecular breeding program. Here, a 4800 bp sequence of the wx1 gene was analyzed among seven wild-type and seven mutant inbreds employing 16 overlapping primers. Three polymorphisms viz., 4 bp InDel (at position 2406 bp) in intron-7 and two SNPs (C to A at position 3325 bp in exon-10 and G to T at position 4310 bp in exon-13) differentiated the dominant (Wx1) and recessive (wx1) allele. Three breeder-friendly PCR markers (WxDel4, SNP3325_CT1, and SNP4310_GT2) specific to InDel and SNPs were developed. WxDel4 amplified 94 bp among mutant-type inbreds, while 90 bp was amplified among wild-type inbreds. SNP3325_CT1 and SNP4310_GT2 revealed the presence-absence polymorphisms with an amplification of 185 bp and 189 bp of amplicon, respectively. These newly developed markers showed 1:1 segregation in both BC 1 F 1 and BC 2 F 1 generations, while 1:2:1 segregation was observed in BC 2 F 2 . The recessive homozygotes (wx1wx1) of BC 2 F 2 identified by the markers possessed significantly higher amylopectin (97.7%) compared to the original inbreds (Wx1Wx1: 72.7% amylopectin). This is the first report of novel wx1 gene-based markers. The information generated here would help in accelerating the development of waxy maize hybrids.