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Polymorphisms in O-methyltransferase genes are associated with stover cell wall digestibility in European maize (Zea maysL.)
BMC Plant Biology
  • Everton A. Brenner, Iowa State University
  • Imad Zein, Technical University of Munich
  • Yongsheng Chen, Iowa State University
  • Jeppe R. Andersen, University of Aarhus
  • Gerhard Wenzel, Technical University of Munich
  • Milena Ouzunova, KWS Saat AG
  • Joachim Eder, Bavarian State Research Center for Agriculture
  • Birte Darnhofer, Bavarian State Research Center for Agriculture
  • Uschi Frei, Iowa State University
  • Yves Barrière, INRA
  • Thomas Lubberstedt, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-12-2010
DOI
10.1186/1471-2229-10-27
Abstract

Background

OMT (O-methyltransferase) genes are involved in lignin biosynthesis, which relates to stover cell wall digestibility. Reduced lignin content is an important determinant of both forage quality and ethanol conversion efficiency of maize stover. Results

Variation in genomic sequences coding for COMT, CCoAOMT1, and CCoAOMT2 was analyzed in relation to stover cell wall digestibility for a panel of 40 European forage maize inbred lines, and re-analyzed for a panel of 34 lines from a published French study. Different methodologies for association analysis were performed and compared. Across association methodologies, a total number of 25, 12, 1, 6 COMT polymorphic sites were significantly associated with DNDF, OMD, NDF, and WSC, respectively. Association analysis for CCoAOMT1 and CCoAOMT2 identified substantially fewer polymorphic sites (3 and 2, respectively) associated with the investigated traits. Our re-analysis on the 34 lines from a published French dataset identified 14 polymorphic sites significantly associated with cell wall digestibility, two of them were consistent with our study. Promising polymorphisms putatively causally associated with variability of cell wall digestibility were inferred from the total number of significantly associated SNPs/Indels. Conclusions

Several polymorphic sites for three O-methyltransferase loci were associated with stover cell wall digestibility. All three tested genes seem to be involved in controlling DNDF, in particular COMT. Thus, considerable variation among Bm3 wildtype alleles can be exploited for improving cell-wall digestibility. Target sites for functional markers were identified enabling development of efficient marker-based selection strategies.

Comments

This article is published as Brenner, Everton A., Imad Zein, Yongsheng Chen, Jeppe R. Andersen, Gerhard Wenzel, Milena Ouzunova, Joachim Eder et al. "Polymorphisms in O-methyltransferase genes are associated with stover cell wall digestibility in European maize (Zea mays L.)." BMC plant biology 10, no. 1 (2010): 27. doi: 10.1186/1471-2229-10-27. Posted with permission.

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Copyright Owner
Brenner et al
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Everton A. Brenner, Imad Zein, Yongsheng Chen, Jeppe R. Andersen, et al.. "Polymorphisms in O-methyltransferase genes are associated with stover cell wall digestibility in European maize (Zea maysL.)" BMC Plant Biology Vol. 10 Iss. 27 (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas-lubberstedt/44/