Mutagenic Effect of Three Ion Beams on Rice and Identification of Heritable Mutations by Whole Genome Sequencing

High-energy ion beams are known to be an effective and unique type of physical mutagen in plants. However, no study on the mutagenic effect of argon (Ar) ion beam radiation on rice has been reported. Genome-wide studies on induced mutations are important to comprehend their characteristics for estab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plants (Basel) 2020-04, Vol.9 (5), p.551, Article 551
Hauptverfasser: Zheng, Yunchao, Li, Shan, Huang, Jianzhong, Fu, Haowei, Zhou, Libin, Furusawa, Yoshiya, Shu, Qingyao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High-energy ion beams are known to be an effective and unique type of physical mutagen in plants. However, no study on the mutagenic effect of argon (Ar) ion beam radiation on rice has been reported. Genome-wide studies on induced mutations are important to comprehend their characteristics for establishing knowledge-based protocols for mutation induction and breeding, which are still very limited in rice. The present study aimed to investigate the mutagenic effect of three ion beams, i.e., Ar, carbon (C) and neon (Ne) on rice and identify and characterize heritable induced mutations by the whole genome sequencing of six M-4 plants. Dose-dependent damage effects were observed on M-1 plants, which were developed from ion beam irradiated dry seeds of two indica (LH15, T23) and two japonica (DS551, DS48) rice lines. High frequencies of chlorophyll-deficient seedlings and male-sterile plants were observed in all M-2 populations (up to similar to 30% on M-1 plant basis); plants from the seeds of different panicles of a common M-1 plant appeared to have different mutations; the whole genome-sequencing demonstrated that there were 236-453 mutations in each of the six M-4 plants, including single base substitutions (SBSs) and small insertion/deletions (InDels), with the number of SBSs similar to 4-8 times greater than that of InDels; SBS and InDel mutations were distributed across different genomic regions of all 12 chromosomes, however, only a small number of mutations (0-6) were present in exonic regions that might have an impact on gene function. In summary, the present study demonstrates that Ar, C and Ne ion beam radiation are all effective for mutation induction in rice and has revealed at the genome level the characteristics of the mutations induced by the three ion beams. The findings are of importance to the efficient use of ion beam radiation for the generation and utilization of mutants in rice.
ISSN:2223-7747
2223-7747
DOI:10.3390/plants9050551