Novel allelic variations in Tannin1 and Tannin2 contribute to tannin absence in sorghum

Mol Breed. 2024 Mar 16;44(3):24. doi: 10.1007/s11032-024-01463-y. eCollection 2024 Mar.

Abstract

Sorghum is an important food crop commonly used for brewing, feed, and bioenergy. Certain genotypes of sorghum contain high concentrations of condensed tannins in seeds, which are beneficial, such as protecting grains from herbivore bird pests, but also impair grain quality and digestibility. Previously, we identified Tannin1 and Tannin2, each with three recessive causal alleles, regulate tannin absence in sorghum. In this study, via characterizing 421 sorghum accessions, we further identified three novel recessive alleles from these two genes. The tan1-d allele contains a 12-bp deletion at position 659 nt and the tan1-e allele contains a 10-bp deletion at position 771 nt in Tannin1. The tan2-d allele contains a C-to-T transition, which results in a premature stop codon before the bHLH domain in Tannin2, and was predominantly selected in China. We further developed KASP assays targeting these identified recessive alleles to efficiently genotype large populations. These studies provide new insights in sorghum domestication and convenient tools for breeding programs.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11032-024-01463-y.

Keywords: Allelic variation; KASP assays; Sorghum; Tannin.