Title: Towards utilization of genome sequence information for
1Towards utilization of genome sequence
information for pigeonpea improvement
By ICAR institutes, SAUs and
ICRISAT
2Pigeonpea (Cajanus cajan L. Millsp)
- Belongs to family Leguminosae with chromosome
no. 2n22 and genome size of 833 Mbp
- A major source of protein to about 20 of the
world population (Thu et al., 2003) - An abundant source of minerals and vitamins
(Saxena et al., 2002) - Most versatile food legume with diversified uses
such as food, feed, fodder and fuel - It is hardy, widely adaptable crop with better
tolerance to drought and high temperature
3Climate change!
4Pigeonpea production trends (last five decades)
Unfortunately, no increase has been witnessed in
its productivity (yield kg ha-1), which in the
past five decades has remained stagnant at around
700 kg ha-1
5Some constraints in pigeonpea production
Fusarium wilt (FW)
Sterility mosaic disease (SMD)
6A route developed and taken by breeders From
germplasm to variety/hybrid
Germplasm
Superior variety
7Genomics-assisted breeding Predicting the
phenotype
Genotype
EST Sequencing Genome Sequencing Map-based Cloning
Genetic Mapping Physical Mapping
Gene(s)
Genetic Resources
Improved germplasm
Trait/QTL
Transcriptomics Proteomics Metabolomics TILLING Ec
oTILLING
Genetic Mapping Association Mapping QTL
Mapping Trait Correlations
Phenotype
Trends Pl Science 2005 Trends Biotech 2006
8A variety of approaches (cars)
- MAS MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
- - Plants are selected for one or more (up to
8-10) alleles -
- MABC MARKER-ASSISTED BACKCROSSING
- One or more (up to 6-8) donor alleles are
transferred to an
elite line -
- MARS MARKER-ASSISTED RECURRENT SELECTION
- Selection for several (up to 20-30) mapped QTLs
relies on index (genetic)
values computed for each individual
based on its haplotype at target QTLs - GWS GENOME-WIDE SELECTION
- Selection of genome-wide several loci that confer
- tolerance/resistance/ superiority to traits of
interest using GEBVs
based on genome-wide marker profiling
9Example of development of a submergence tolerant
version of Swarna, a widely grown variety, in 2½
years
X
Swarna Non-tolerant
IR49830-7 tolerant
Marker-assisted backcrossing
- Target gene selection
- Recombinant selection
- Background selection
Sub1
BC2 or BC3
Swarna-Sub1
Courtesy of David Mackill, IRRI
10New Sub1 lines (in yellow) and recurrent parents
(in white) after 17 days submergence in field at
IRRI, 2007DS
Courtesy of David Mackill, IRRI
11Swarna-Sub1 in U.P. (Faizabad area)
Courtesy of David Mackill, IRRI, The Philippines
12Challenges in genomics- assisted crop improvement
- Narrow genetic base in the primary gene pool
- Very few molecular (SSR) markers
- Non-availability of appropriate germplasm such as
mapping populations - Intraspecific genetic map with low marker density
- Non-availability of trait-associated markers in
breeding - Issues of costs and expertise in molecular
breeding
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14Developing infrastructures and sign posts for
providing directions (Indo-US AKI, CGIAR-GCP,
US-NSF)
15Gene/transcriptomic/ SNP resources
Resource Pigeonpea
SSRs 29,000
SNPs 35,000
GoldenGate 768 SNPs
KASPar assays 1,616 SNPs
DArT arrays 15,360
Sanger ESTs 20,000
454 /FLX reads 496,705
TUSs 21,432
Illumina reads (million reads) gt160 (14 parents)
16CMS and mt genome sequencing of pigeonpea
- ICPA 2039, ICPB 2039, ICPH 2433 ICPW 29
sequenced using 454 technology
17From Orphan crop- genomic resources rich crop
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21Phylogenetic analysis of Cajanus spp. using
KASPar assays
Cluster-I
Cluster-II
Cluster-III
22How to use this genome information
23Objectives
- Molecular mapping of resistance to biotic and
abiotic stresses - - Mapping populations available
- - Genotyping and phenotyping
- - Marker trait association for resistance to
FW, SMD and Rf - Enhancing the genetic base of pigeonpea genepool
by developing multi-parents populations - - MAGIC population (2000 lines) developed using
8 parents - - NAM population (50 crosses-1000 lines) with
50 parents - - High density genotyping or genotyping by
sequencing of 3000 lines - - Phenotyping of MAGIC and NAM populations
(each population at least in 3 environments) - - Marker trait association analysis for traits
of interest -
24- Genome wide association studies based on
re-sequencing and phenotyping of germplasm set - - Germplasm set of 300-500 lines assembled
- - Genotyping-by-sequencing of the germplasm
set - - Precise phenotyping of the germplasm set by
different partners - - Fine mapping of traits of interest for
breeders - Bioinformatics analysis to improve the quality
of - draft genome
- - Two genome assemblies need to be merged
- - Defining a consensus genes set
- - Breeders-friendly genome databases
-
25- Validation and characterization of 1213 disease
resistance genes - - Genetic mapping of disease resistance genes
- - Association of genes with disease
resistance traits - - Functional validation of selected set of
candidate genes - - Mining of superior allleles/haplotypes for
disease resistance - Validation and characterization of ca. 200
abiotic stress tolerance genes - - Genetic mapping of abiotic stress tolerance
genes - - Association of genes with abiotic stress
tolerance traits - - Functional validation of selected set of
candidate genes - - Mining of superior allleles/haplotypes for
abiotic stress tolerance genes
26Possible outcomes
- Superior breeding lines for traits of interest
with enhanced genetic diversity - Molecular markers associated with resistance to
- biotic stresses and tolerance to abiotic
stresses - Alleles and haplotype information available on
germplasm set so that breeders can use
informative lines - Set of well characterized disease resistance and
- abiotic stress tolerance genes
- Breeder-friendly genome database of pigeonpea
-
-
27Possible partners
NRCPB, New Delhi NBPGR, New Delhi
IIPR, Kanpur IARI, New Delhi Uni Agril
Sciences- Bangalore Banaras Hindu
University ANGRAU- Hyderabad