QTL identified that influence tuber length-width ratio, degree of flatness, tuber size, and specific gravity in a russet-skinned, tetraploid mapping population

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Mar 22:15:1343632. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1343632. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Potato tuber shape, size, and specific gravity are important agronomic traits in the russet market class of potatoes with an impact on quality, consistency, and product recovery of processed foods such as French fries. Therefore, identifying genetic regions associated with the three traits through quantitative trait locus/loci (QTL) analysis is a crucial process in the subsequent development of marker-assisted selection for use in potato breeding programs. QTL analysis was conducted on a tetraploid mapping population consisting of 190 individuals derived from the cross between two russet-skinned parents, Palisade Russet and the breeding clone ND028673B-2Russ. Field data collected over a 2-year period and used in the QTL analyses included tuber length-width and width-depth ratios that were obtained using a digital caliper. The width-depth ratio provided an assessment of the "flatness" of a tuber, which is of importance in potato processing. To cross-validate the accuracy and differences among tuber shape measurement methods, a trained evaluator also assessed the identical tubers based on 1-5 scale (compressed to long) visual assessment method. Furthermore, the weights of analyzed tubers and specific gravities were also collected during the phenotyping process for each mapping clone. A major tuber shape QTL was consistently observed on chromosome 10 with both the length-width ratio and visual assessments. On chromosome 4, a significant QTL for tuber shape from the visual assessment phenotypic data was also detected. Additionally, a tuber shape-related QTL on chromosome 6 was also detected from the length-width ratio data from 2020. Chromosome 2 was also identified as having a significant QTL for the width-depth ratio, which is of importance in influencing the flatness of a tuber. One significant QTL for tuber weight (i.e., tuber size) was observed on chromosome 5, and a significant QTL for specific gravity was found on chromosome 3. These significant and major QTL should be useful for developing marker-assisted selection for more efficient potato breeding.

Keywords: potato tuber shape visual assessment; specific gravity; tetraploid potato QTL analysis; tuber length-width ratio; tuber size; tuber width-depth ratio.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The analysis, interpretation of the data, and writing of the manuscript were supported by USDA-ARS, Project #2050–21000-036-00D: Genetic Improvement of Potato for Sustainable Production and Enhanced Tuber Qualities for the Western United States in collaboration with the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE).