Use of recombinant inbred lines of wheat for study of associations of high-molecular-weight glutenin subunit alleles to quantitative traits

Abstract
The high-molecular-weight glutenin subunits (HMW glutenin), encoded by alleles at homoeologous lociGlu-A1,Glu-B1, andGlu-D1 on the long arms of chromosomes1A,1B, and1D of a set of F8 random recombinant inbred lines (RIL) derived from the bread wheat cross Anza × Cajeme 71, were classified by SDS-PAGE. Anza has poor breadmaking quality and HMW-glutenin subunits (Payne numbers) null (Glu-A1c), 7+8 (Glu-B1b), and 2+12 (Glu-D1a); Cajeme 71 has good quality and 1 (Glu-A1a), 17+18 (Glu-B1i), and 5+10 (Glu-D1d). The combinations of these alleles in the RIL were examined for associations with grain yield and four indicators of grain quality — protein content, yellowberry, pearling index, and SDS sedimentation volume. Data were obtained from a field experiment with three nitrogen fertilization treatments on 48 RIL and the parents. Orthogonal partitioning of the genetic variance associated with the three HMW glutenin subunit loci into additive and epistatic (digenic and trigenic) effects showed strong associations of these loci with grain yield and the indicators of quality; however, the associations accounted for no more than 25% of the differences between the parents. Genetic variance was detected among the RIL, which had the same HMW glutenin genotype for all traits. Epistatic effects were absent for grain yield and yellowberry, but were substantial for grain protein content, pearling index, and SDS sedimentation volume. All three loci had large single-locus additive effects for grain yield, protein, and SDS sedimentation volume. Yellowberry was largely influenced byGlu-B1 andGlu-D1, whereas pearling index was associated withGlu-A1 andGlu-B1. Even though the observed associations-of effects of HMW glutenin loci with the quantitative characters were small relative to the total genetic variability, they are of considerable importance in understanding the genetics of wheat quality, and are useful in the development of new wheat varieties with specific desired characteristics.

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