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Genetic relatedness of rice landraces in North East India with wild relatives using chloroplast markers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2024

Madhuchhanda Parida
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Gayatri Gouda
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Parameswaran Chidambaranathan*
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Ngangkham Umakanta
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India ICAR Research Complex for NEH Region Manipur Centre, Imphal, Manipur-795004, India
Jawahar Lal Katara
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Cayalvizhi Balasubramania Sai
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Sanghamitra Samantaray
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Bhaskar Chandra Patra
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India
Trilochan Mohapatra
Affiliation:
ICAR-Nationl Rice Research Institute (ICAR-NRRI), Cuttack, Odisha-753006, India Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), New Delhi-110001, India
*
Corresponding author: Parameswaran Chidambaranathan; Email: agriparames07@gmail.com

Abstract

The evolutionary relationship between domesticated Oryza species and their wild relatives in North East India is not well understood. To improve the understanding of the evolutionary relationship, this study investigates the genetic diversity of 68 indigenous rice landraces from North East India, ten O. rufipogon genotypes, and nine O. nivara genotypes using chloroplast variable repeat markers which, due to non-recombination and uniparental inheritance, enable better phylogenetic inference. Reference genotypes IR64 (indica) and Nipponbare (japonica) were included to characterize various phylogenetic clusters. Using distance-based hierarchical clustering, model-based structuring and principal component analysis, selected landraces from the three North Eastern Indian states of Assam, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh were grouped into two phylogenetically different clusters that represented the IR64 and Nipponbare groupings. Interestingly, despite the fact that a cluster analysis combining North East landraces and wild relatives likewise produced two separate clusters (cluster I: Nipponbare, cluster II: IR64), the majority of the wild relatives were only clustered in the IR64 cluster. This suggests that the two distinct evolutionary histories of the rice landraces in North East India are distinguished by their genetic affinity for wild relatives and their variation in the indica and japonica pools. These results highlight chloroplast divergence influencing the genetic diversity of North East landraces with wild relatives. Further, these findings will enable in-depth studies on the functional significance of chloroplast diversity on trait adaptation in rice landraces.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of National Institute of Agricultural Botany

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