A Large-Scale Genomic Association Analysis Identifies the Candidate Genes Regulating Salt Tolerance in Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) Seedlings

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Jul 27;23(15):8260. doi: 10.3390/ijms23158260.

Abstract

Salt stress seriously restricts plant growth and development, affects yield and quality, and thus becomes an urgent problem to be solved in cucumber stress resistance breeding. Mining salt tolerance genes and exploring the molecular mechanism of salt tolerance could accelerate the breeding of cucumber germplasm with excellent salt stress tolerance. In this study, 220 cucumber core accessions were used for Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) and the identification of salt tolerance genes. The salinity injury index that was collected in two years showed significant differences among the core germplasm. A total of seven loci that were associated with salt tolerance in cucumber seedlings were repeatedly detected, which were located on Chr.2 (gST2.1), Chr.3 (gST3.1 and gST3.2), Chr.4 (gST4.1 and gST4.2), Chr.5 (gST5.1), and Chr.6 (gST6.1). Within these loci, 62 genes were analyzed, and 5 candidate genes (CsaV3_2G035120, CsaV3_3G023710, CsaV3_4G033150, CsaV3_5G023530, and CsaV3_6G009810) were predicted via the functional annotation of Arabidopsis homologous genes, haplotype of extreme salt-tolerant accessions, and qRT-PCR. These results provide a guide for further research on salt tolerance genes and molecular mechanisms of cucumber seedlings.

Keywords: GWAS; candidate genes; cucumber seedlings; salt stress.

MeSH terms

  • Cucumis sativus* / genetics
  • Genome-Wide Association Study
  • Genomics
  • Plant Breeding
  • Salt Tolerance* / genetics
  • Seedlings / genetics