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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stuttgart, Arkansas » Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #299517

Title: Development of inter-specific chromosomes segment substitution libraries (CSSL) in rice

Author
item SINGH, NAMRATA - Cornell University
item KIM, HYUN-JUNG - Cornell University
item ALI, M. LIAKAT - University Of Arkansas
item AKTHER, KAZI - Cornell University
item AHN, SANG-NAG - Chungnam National University
item Eizenga, Georgia
item MCCOUCH, SARAH - Cornell University

Submitted to: International Plant and Animal Genome IX Conference
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 11/30/2012
Publication Date: 12/10/2012
Citation: Singh, N., Kim, H., Ali, M., Akther, K.M., Ahn, S., Eizenga, G.C., Mccouch, S.R. 2012. Development of inter-specific chromosomes segment substitution libraries (CSSL) in rice. International Plant and Animal Genome Conference. XXI. January 12-16, 2013 San Diego, CA.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Six libraries of inter-specific Chromosome Segment Substitution Lines (CSSLs) of rice are being developed as pre-breeding materials and genetic stocks. Three accessions of O. rufipogon were selected as donors, based on phylogenetic, geographical and morphological divergence, and crossed with two recurrent parents, Cybonnet, a US tropical japonica cultivar known for its desirable grain quality, and IR64, a high yielding indica cultivar developed by IRRI and grown globally. Each CSSL carries a single 4-5 Mb target introgression, along with 0-3 spurious donor segments in the genetic background and there are 70-80 backcrossed (BC3-BC5) CSSLs in each library. Genotyping for targeted introgression sites and recurrent background selection was performed using either an Illumina 384-SNP OPA or Genotyping-by-Sequencing (GBS) based on 384-plex bar-coded libraries. We compare the efficiency and resolution of the two genotyping assays for CSSL construction. When completed, these CSSLs will be used to screen for wild O. rufipogon introgressions conferring agronomically important traits that will expand the pool of genetic variation available to rice breeders in two elite breeding backgrounds, Cybonnet and IR64.