DArTseq genotyping facilitates the transfer of "exotic" chromatin from a Secale cereale × S. strictum hybrid into wheat

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Sep 6:15:1407840. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1407840. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Cultivated and wild species of the genus rye (Secale) are important but underexploited gene sources for increasing the genetic diversity of bread wheat. Gene transfer is possible via bridge genetic materials derived from intergeneric hybrids. During this process, it is essential to precisely identify the rye chromatin in the wheat genetic background. In the present study, backcross generation BC2F8 from a cross between Triticum aestivum (Mv9kr1) and S. cereanum ('Kriszta,' a cultivar from the artificial hybrid of S. cereale and S. strictum) was screened using in-situ hybridization (GISH and FISH) and analyzed by DArTseq genotyping in order to select potentially agronomically useful genotypes for prebreeding purposes. Of the 329,267 high-quality short sequence reads generated, 27,822 SilicoDArT and 8,842 SNP markers specific to S. cereanum 1R-7R chromosomes were identified. Heatmaps of the marker densities along the 'Lo7' rye reference pseudomolecules revealed subtle differences between the FISH- and DArTseq-based results. This study demonstrates that the "exotic" rye chromatin of S. cereanum introgressed into wheat can be reliably identified by high-throughput DArTseq genotyping. The Mv9kr1-'Kriszta' addition and translocation lines presented here may serve as valuable prebreeding genetic materials for the development of stress-tolerant or disease-resistant wheat varieties.

Keywords: DArTseq markers; Secale cereanum; Triticum aestivum; chromosome rearrangements; genotyping; heatmap; introgression lines.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This research was financed by the National Research, Development and Innovation Office – NKFIH, (K135057, PD145915, TKP2021-NKTA-06); by a Marie Curie Fellowship grant award ‘AEGILWHEAT’ (H2020-MSCAIF-2016–746253) under the H2020 framework program of the European Union; and by the project TowArds Next GENeration Crops, reg. no. CZ.02.01.01/00/22_008/0004581 of the ERDF Programme Johannes Amos Comenius.