Fine mapping and identification of the fuzzless gene GaFzl in DPL972 (Gossypium arboreum)

  • Xiaoxu Feng
  • , Hailiang Cheng
  • , Dongyun Zuo
  • , Youping Zhang
  • , Qiaolian Wang
  • , Ke Liu
  • , Javaria Ashraf
  • , Qiuhong Yang
  • , Simin Li
  • , Xiaoqin Chen
  • , Guoli Song

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Key message: The fuzzless gene GaFzl was fine mapped to a 70-kb region containing a GIR1 gene, Cotton_A_11941, responsible for the fuzzless trait in Gossypium arboreum DPL972. Abstract: Cotton fiber is the most important natural textile resource. The fuzzless mutant DPL972 (Gossypium arboreum) provides a useful germplasm resource to explore the molecular mechanism underlying fiber and fuzz initiation and development. In our previous research, the fuzzless gene in DPL972 was identified as a single dominant gene and named GaFzl. In the present study, we fine mapped this gene using F2 and BC1 populations. By combining traditional map-based cloning and next-generation sequencing, we mapped GaFzl to a 70-kb region containing seven annotated genes. RNA-Sequencing and re-sequencing analysis narrowed these candidates to two differentially expressed genes, Cotton_A_11941 and Cotton_A_11942. Sequence alignment uncovered no variation in coding or promoter regions of Cotton_A_11942 between DPL971 and DPL972, whereas two single-base mutations in the promoter region and a TTG insertion in the coding region were detected in Cotton_A_11941 in DPL972. Cotton_A_11941 encoding a homologous gene of GIR1 (GLABRA2-interacting repressor) in Arabidopsis thaliana is thus the candidate gene most likely responsible for the fuzzless trait in DPL972. Our findings should lead to a better understanding of cotton fuzz formation, thereby accelerating marker-assisted selection during cotton breeding.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2169-2179
Number of pages11
JournalTheoretical And Applied Genetics
Volume132
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2019
Externally publishedYes

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