Login / Signup

Combined Approach of GWAS and Phylogenetic Analyses to Identify New Candidate Genes That Participate in Arabidopsis thaliana Primary Root Development Using Cellular Measurements and Primary Root Length.

Brenda Anabel López-RuizElsa-Herminia QuezadaAlma Piñeyro-NelsonHugo TovarBerenice García-PonceMaría de la Paz SánchezElena R Álvarez-BuyllaAdriana Garay-Arroyo
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have allowed the identification of different loci associated with primary root (PR) growth, and Arabidopsis is an excellent model for these studies. The PR length is controlled by cell proliferation, elongation, and differentiation; however, the specific contribution of proliferation and differentiation in the control of PR growth is still poorly studied. To this end, we analyzed 124 accessions and used a GWAS approach to identify potential causal genomic regions related to four traits: PR length, growth rate, cell proliferation and cell differentiation. Twenty-three genes and five statistically significant SNPs were identified. The SNP with the highest score mapped to the fifth exon of NAC048 and this change makes a missense variant in only 33.3% of the accessions with a large PR, compared with the accessions with a short PR length. Moreover, we detected five more SNPs in this gene and in NAC3 that allow us to discover closely related accessions according to the phylogenetic tree analysis. We also found that the association between genetic variants among the 18 genes with the highest scores in our GWAS and the phenotypic classes into which we divided our accessions are not straightforward and likely follow historical patterns.
Keyphrases