Genome-wide Association Study Identify Alleles Controlling Important Agricultural Traits Directly in Rice
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is the staple food for more than half of the world population. After thousands of years of cultivation, rice landraces have accumulated an enormous of important agronomic traits, which are invaluable genetic resources for breeding elite varieties for sustainable agriculture. Moreover, rice has a high-quality reference genome sequence and the self-fertilization system that allows simplified haplotype identification and repeated phenotyping for GWAS.
Figure 1 Genetic structure and population differentiation in 950 rice accessions. (a) Neighbor-joining tree of 950 rice accessions constructed from a simple matching distance of 4.1 million SNPs. The five divergent groups, indica (Ind), aus (Aus), temperate japonica (TeJ), tropical japonica (TrJ) and intermediate (Int), are colored in red, purple, blue, cyan and black, respectively. The scale bar indicates the simple matching distance. (b) The distributions of the pairwise population-differentiation statistic (Fst) across the rice genomes between indica and temperate japonica (in black), between temperate japonica and tropical japonica (in blue) and between indica and aus (in red)