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Natural variation in Arabidopsis, a tool to identify genetic bases of nitrogen use efficiency S. Chaillou, F. Chardon, J. Laurette, S. Ikram, O. Loudet and F. Daniel-Vedele INRA Versailles Plants have different nutrient requirements: some species are very exigent, others are less demanding. Our objective is to find the genetic bases of the nutrient demand by the plant. We take the case of Nitrogen Use Efficiency in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Searching for QTL of nitrogen use efficiency in Arabidopsis - Creation of an Arabidopsis recombinant inbred lines population from two genetically distant ecotypes (Bay 0 and Shahdara) - Obtaining a genetic map of the population with markers (genotypical data) - Growing plants on two types of nitrogen nutrition, normal (10 mM) or limiting (3mM) and measuring several parameters (phenotypical data) - Correlation between genotypical and phenotypical data for QTL detection Recombinant Inbred Lines - RILs Shahdara Bay-0 Heterozygous Bay-0 from Germany Shahdara from Central Asia Single Seed Descent 420 RILs Bay-0 x Shahdara RIL population Genetic map of the population of 420 F6 Recombinant Inbred Lines I II T1G11 III MSAT2-5 IV NGA172 F21M12 V MSAT4-39 MSAT4-8 NGA225 NGA249 ATHCHIB2 MSAT2-38 NGA8 MSAT1-10 MSAT5-14 MSAT3-19 NGA248 MSAT2-36 MSAT2-41 T27K12 MSAT4-35 NGA139 MSAT4-15 MSAT5-22 MSAT3-32 MSAT2-7 MSAT4-18 MSAT3-21 MSAT5-9 MSAT4-9 MSAT2-10 NGA128 MSAT2-22 F5I14 MSAT5-12 MSAT3-18 MSAT4-37 MSAT1-13 MSAT5-19 MSAT1-5 38 microsatellites markers Loudet et al, TAG 2002 Phenotyping of the population 10 mM 3 mM View of a set of 24 Arabidopsis lines after 34 days of culture N- (3 mM) N+ (10 mM) (Loudet et al., 2001) Isolation of several QTL linked to biomass, total N, amino-acid or sulfate content SO3.1 After isolation of the QTL, we must validate the QTL. The use of Heterozygous Inbred Families (HIF) allows the validation of QTL. Heterogeneous Inbred Family - HIF Shahdara Bay-0 RILXXX (F6) Heterozygous HIF - Sha HIF - Het HIF - Bay Example of QTL validation using HIFs AA content nmole/mg of DM Amino acid content 220 200 180 160 X X 140 120 B S ¾ Mean of ILs 421 B = 173 nmole aa /mg of DM ¾ Mean of ILs 421 S = 155 nmole aa /mg of DM Validation of a QTL for sulfate content Shahdara Bay-0 Heterozygous 068S: 110 nmol SO4/mgDW HIF068 - Sha 068 068B: 80 nmol SO4/mgDW HIF068 - Bay Then, you may be lucky if a candidate gene is present in the chromosome area where the QTL is located. That was the case for the QTL of sulfate content. A gene coding for a key enzyme of sulfate assimilatory pathway (APR2) was present in the interval of interest on the chromosome. QTL SO3.1 confirmed Let us have a look at sulfate assimilation…. ATP sulphurylase SO4-- Sulfite APS O-acetyl-L-serine reductase sulphydrylase reductase Cysteine SO3-S-APS 2e- ATP 2 GSH 6eFerredoxin Glutathione Proteins OAS Methionine Serine acetyl transferase APR1 APS reductase APR2 APR3 QTL SO3.1 Confirmation of the candidate gene APR2 APR2 sequenced on Bay-0, Shahdara and 24 ecotypes of Arabidopsis : one Single Nucleotide Polymorphism resulting in one amino acid change in the protein . *** *** cTP aa position (P)APS reductase V V V A V V V V V D D D D D D G D D T T T T T T T T N R R R R R R L R R M M M M M M I M M S S S S S S S S T T T T T T T T T L G G G G G G E E E R R S R R R K K K 5 38 40 46 49 56.1 58 65 79 107 111 349 385 399 430 Loudet et al 2007 S Trx-like Q Q Q Q Q Q E E E K K K R R R R R R I I I I V V I V V A A A A A E A A A A S A A A A A A A hapl1 Col-0 hapl2 Edi-0 hapl3 Bur-0 hapl4 Kn-0 hapl5 Bay-0 hapl6 Shahdara hapl7 Cvi-0 hapl8 Bla-1 hapl9 Ct-1 Representative accession To test the candidate gene APR2, we performed a complementation test • Test of dominance SO4-- content HIF068-B a HIF068-BXS a b HIF068-S 0 20 40 60 80 100 Sulfate Content (nmol/mgDM) 120 • Dominance of Bay-0 allele => suggesting that Shahdara allele is less active => accumulation of sulfate • In the complementation test : the Bay-0 allele will be used to complement a HIF-Shahdara Loudet et al 2007 Transgenic complementation test in Shahdara: restoration of the Bay-0 sulfate content level 140 120 b Sulfate Content (nmol/mgDM) 100 a 80 a a a a a 60 a 40 20 0 -B -S 8 8 6 6 F0 F0 I I H H HIF068-S (APR2-B)/T3 Loudet et al 2007 Thus, the QTL linked to sulfate content is fully explained by APR2 allelic variation, which is a successful candidate gene approach. If no remarkable gene is mapped in the region of interest, we have to go through a fine mapping approach which allows to restrict the length of the interval on the chromosome. The use of rHIF lines for fine mapping I III II III IV V Line 404 (F6) isheterozygous at theL4 locus Shahdara allele allele Heterozygous allele allele L4 locus F8 Self-fertilization fertilization Bay-0 allele Self-fertilisation fertilisation F9 BBB SSSS BB SSSSS SSS BBBB SS BBBBBBSBBBBBSSBBBB SSS B SSSSSSBSSSSSBBSSSS BBB BBBBB S marker 1 I II III IVV I II III IV V I II III IV V marker 2 marker 3 marker 4 marker 5 404-2 (F7) Heterozygous(F7) (F7) 404-7 (F7) marker 6 Self-fertilization fertilization MULTIPLICATION F10 We compare the phenotypes of plants which are recombinant in the area of interest. FINE MAPPING of a QTL 3.3 3.4 M1 M2 3.5 3.65 3.3 3.4 M1 M2 3.5 3.65 S S B B S 3.3 3.4 M2 3.5 3.65 S S B S RESULT 44-7 M1 147-8 S The QTL interval is restricted from the distance 3.4 – 3.5 to the distance M1 – M2. This fine mapping approach has to be repeated until the QTL interval is reduced to a portion containing about 20 genes in order to be able to find a candidate gene. So, it is a school for patience ! We can go further by observing the variability among the Arabidopsis genotypes, which are named « accessions ». Arabidopsis thaliana accessions Oy-0 St-0 Kn-0 Mh-1 Edi-0 Gre-0 Bur-0 N13 Stw-0 Blh-1 Pyl-1 Alc-0 Can-0 Ita-0 Ge-0 Shakata Bl-1 Tsu Jea Ct1 Cvi-0 Akita Sha Mt-0 Core collection Restricted set of accessions that encompasses the range of diversity of the full collection. (Exist core collections of 8, 16, 24, 48 accessions) (Mc khan et al., 2004) 4 mM Bay-0 N13 0.2 mM Sakata Akita Shahdara Oy-0 Mh-1 Gre-0 Natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana (core collection of 24 accessions) 28 days of culture on 4 mM nitrate (Sobia Ikram, 2007) Hydroponic culture of Arabidopsis plants Can-0 from Spain Root Mass / length Primary Root Length Phyllochron 20% 0% -20% -40% -60% -80% -100% Root Growth Rate Root Fresh Matter control Bay-0 from Germany N Limited Leaf Number Chlorophyll content Shoot Fresh Matter Shoot Root ratio Root Mass / length Primary Root Length Phyllochron 20% 0% -20% -40% -60% -80% -100% Root Growth Rate Root Fresh Matter Leaf Number Chlorophyll content Shoot Fresh Matter Shoot Root ratio Phenotypic responses profiling of two contrasted ecotypes faced to N limitation We were able to distinguish three classes of accessions: - Class 1, plants which are very affected by N starvation - Class 2, plants which are less affected - Class 3, plants which sustain quite well N starvation After 7 days N starvation, the different genotypes of the core collection can be sorted in three classes. Shoot FW Root FW Class 1 - 45 % + 38 % Class 2 - 36 % + 78 % Class 3 - 23 % + 137 % Values correspond to the decrease or increase in percentage of the control. Dissimilarity 50000 45000 40000 35000 30000 25000 20000 15000 10000 Class 1 Dendrogram col0 Oy0 N13 BL1 Gre0 Tsu0 Akita Blh1 stw0 pyl1 Bur0 Sto CtI Mt0 Cvi0 Edi0 Bay0 shahdra Jea Can0 sakata Mh1 ler Ge0 Alc0 Kn0 5000 0 The three classes of accessions Class 2 Class 3 Perspectives • In a model plant, discovery of genes involved in the capacity of plants to cope with N deficiency in the soil • In crop species, finding of new genes or markers associated with N demand • Select new cultivars having higher nitrogen use efficiency Olivier Loudet Researcher Françoise Vedele Fabien Chardon Researcher Head of NAP unit And the Palace of Versailles ! Sobia Ikram PhD student