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      Progress in Research and Development on Hybrid Rice: A Super-domesticate in China

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          Abstract

          Background

          China has been successful in breeding hybrid rice strains, but is now facing challenges to develop new hybrids with high-yielding potential, better grain quality, and tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. This paper reviews the most significant advances in hybrid rice breeding in China, and presents a recent study on fine-mapping quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for yield traits.

          Scope

          By exploiting new types of male sterility, hybrid rice production in China has become more diversified. The use of inter-subspecies crosses has made an additional contribution to broadening the genetic diversity of hybrid rice and played an important role in the breeding of super rice hybrids in China. With the development and application of indica-inclined and japonica-inclined parental lines, new rice hybrids with super high-yielding potential have been developed and are being grown on a large scale. DNA markers for subspecies differentiation have been identified and applied, and marker-assisted selection performed for the development of restorer lines carrying disease resistance genes. The genetic basis of heterosis in highly heterotic hybrids has been studied, but data from these studies are insufficient to draw sound conclusions. In a QTL study using stepwise residual heterozygous lines, two linked intervals harbouring QTLs for yield traits were resolved, one of which was delimited to a 125-kb region.

          Conclusions

          Advances in rice genomic research have shed new light on the genetic study and germplasm utilization in rice. Molecular marker-assisted selection is a powerful tool to increase breeding efficiency, but much work remains to be done before this technique can be extended from major genes to QTLs.

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          Most cited references38

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          Importance of epistasis as the genetic basis of heterosis in an elite rice hybrid.

          The genetic basis of heterosis was investigated in an elite rice hybrid by using a molecular linkage map with 150 segregating loci covering the entire rice genome. Data for yield and three traits that were components of yield were collected over 2 years from replicated field trials of 250 F(2:3) families. Genotypic variations explained from about 50% to more than 80% of the total variation. Interactions between genotypes and years were small compared with the main effects. A total of 32 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) were detected for the four traits; 12 were observed in both years and the remaining 20 were detected in only one year. Overdominance was observed for most of the QTLs for yield and also for a few QTLs for the component traits. Correlations between marker heterozygosity and trait expression were low, indicating that the overall heterozygosity made little contribution to heterosis. Digenic interactions, including additive by additive, additive by dominance, and dominance by dominance, were frequent and widespread in this population. The interactions involved large numbers of marker loci, most of which individually were not detectable on single-locus basis; many interactions among loci were detected in both years. The results provide strong evidence that epistasis plays a major role as the genetic basis of heterosis.
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            Pyramiding of bacterial blight resistance genes in rice: marker-assisted selection using RFLP and PCR

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              Development of a microsatellite framework map providing genome-wide coverage in rice ( Oryza sativa L.)

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ann Bot
                annbot
                annbot
                Annals of Botany
                Oxford University Press
                0305-7364
                1095-8290
                October 2007
                18 August 2007
                18 August 2007
                : 100
                : 5
                : 959-966
                Affiliations
                Chinese National Center for Rice Improvement and State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, simpleChina National Rice Research Institute (CNRRI) , Hangzhou 310006, China
                Author notes
                [* ]For correspondence. E-mail: shcheng@ 123456mail.hz.zj.cn
                Article
                mcm121
                10.1093/aob/mcm121
                2759200
                17704538
                78e38be6-ae61-4c5b-99b5-316af67aeb33
                © 2007 The Author(s)

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 30 September 2006
                : 23 November 2006
                : 14 May 2007
                Categories
                Articles
                Review

                Plant science & Botany
                cytoplasmic male sterility,molecular marker-assisted selection,dna marker,inter-subspecies,hybrid rice,quantitative trait loci

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