Development of doubled haploid inducer lines facilitates selection of superior haploid inducers in maize

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Jan 5:14:1320660. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1320660. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Haploid inducers are key components of doubled haploid (DH) technology in maize. Robust agronomic performance and better haploid induction ability of inducers are persistently sought through genetic improvement. We herein developed C1-I inducers enabling large-scale in vivo haploid induction of inducers and discovered superior inducers from the DH progenies. The haploid induction rate (HIR) of C1-I inducers ranged between 5.8% and 12.0%. Overall, the success rate of DH production was 13% on average across the 23 different inducer crosses. The anthesis-silking interval and days to flowering of inducer F1s are significantly correlated with the success rate of DH production (r = -0.48 and 0.47, respectively). Transgressive segregants in DH inducers (DHIs) were found for the traits (days to flowering, HIR, plant height, and total primary branch length). Moreover, the best HIR in DHIs exceeded 23%. Parental genome contributions to DHI progenies ranged between 0.40 and 0.55, respectively, in 25 and 75 percentage quantiles, and the mean and median were 0.48. The allele frequency of the four traits from inducer parents to DHI progenies did not correspond with the phenotypic difference between superior and inferior individuals in the DH populations by genome-wide Fst analysis. This study demonstrated that the recombinant DHIs can be accessed on a large scale and used as materials to facilitate the genetic improvement of maternal haploid inducers by in vivo DH technology.

Keywords: doubled haploids; haploid inducers; in vivo induction; line development; transgressive segregation.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (grant numbers: IOW04714, IOW05520; IOW05510; IOW05656; NIFA award 2018-51181-28419 and 2020-51300-32180), US. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, the Iowa State University Plant Sciences Institute, Iowa State University Crop Bioengineering Center, R.F. Baker Center for Plant Breeding, and the K.J. Frey Chair in Agronomy at Iowa State University.