Abstract
Modern agriculture's greatest challenge is climate change, significantly
impacting agricultural systems through altered temperature and
precipitation patterns, and increased frequency and intensity of extreme
events. Maize, a crucial crop for food security worldwide, is known to be
highly susceptible to these changes. Landraces represent germplasm of
election where breeding may source favourable alleles for adaptation. This
research aims to identify genetic markers that explain environmental
variability to support the development of resilient maize genotypes.
Selected landraces from Northern-Central Italy were genotyped using a
double digest restriction-site associated DNA (ddRAD-seq) approach,
followed by quality filtering for Phred Score, minor allele frequency and
SNP missingness. The sequencing yielded 1,437,328 variants, and the dataset
after filtering was reduced to 6,002 variants. Finally, an LD-pruned subset
of 2,018 markers was created to represent the collection's diversity.
Partial redundancy analysis was employed to investigate the relation
existing between climate and genetic variation of the studied materials.
The analysis used the LD-pruned SNPs as response variables and a set of noncollinear
bioclimatic indicators as dependent variables while controlling
for genetic structure and geographical origin. Outliers were identified
with a Bonferroni correction at a 5% nominal p-value threshold. Partial
redundancy analysis revealed that climate, geography, and genetic structure
together explained 30% of the genetic variance in our maize landraces.
Climate accounted for 45% of this variation, genetic structure for 31%, and
geographic coordinates for 11%. Three significantly associated SNPs were
identified: two of these are localized in two distinct genes,
Zm00001eb068470 and Zm00001eb418760, respectively, not yet characterized.
Performing analysis of chromosome-specific linkage disequilibrium decay, we
estimated windows based on half-decay distance. In the 67 Kb LD-window of
Zm00001eb068470, located on chromosome 2, we found Zm00001eb068520, a gene
encoding the APETALA2 protein. AP2/ERFs are crucial transcription factors
in maize, regulating hormone and stress responses, playing, moreover,
significant roles in ethylene signalling pathways that affect ear length,
flower number, fertility, and grain yield. They are therefore vital traits
for maize's adaptation to environmental stresses like flooding and heat,
making them essential targets for breeding programs to improve stress
tolerance and ensure stable, high yields under climate change.
This work is part of the project NODES, which has received funding from the
MUR–M4C2 1.5 of PNRR with grant agreement no. ECS00000036.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Proceedings of the LXVII SIGA Annual Congress |
Pages | 1-2 |
Number of pages | 2 |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Event | LXVII SIGA Annual Congress - Bologna Duration: 10 Sept 2024 → 13 Sept 2024 |
Conference
Conference | LXVII SIGA Annual Congress |
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City | Bologna |
Period | 10/9/24 → 13/9/24 |
Keywords
- Landraces
- Landscape-genomics
- Maize
- Partial Redundancy Analysis
- Resilience