Genetic Analysis of Main Gene + Polygenic Gene of Nutritional Traits of Land Cotton Cottonseed
2025
Yage Li | Weifeng Guo | Liangrong He | Xinchuan Cao
Background: The regulation of oil and protein contents in cottonseed is governed by a complex genetic network. Gaining insight into the mechanisms controlling these traits is necessary for dissecting the formation patterns of cottonseed quality. Method: In this study, Xinluzhong 37 (P1) and Xinluzhong 51 (P2) were selected as parental lines for two reciprocal crosses: P1 ×: P2 (F1) and its reciprocal P2 ×: P1 (F1&prime:). Each F1 was selfed and backcrossed to both parents to generate the F2 (F2&prime:), B1 (B1&prime:), and B2 (B2&prime:) generations. To assess nutritional traits in hairy (non-delinted) and lint-free (delinted) seeds, two indicators, oil content and protein content, were measured in both seed types. Joint segregation analysis was employed to analyze the inheritance of these traits, based on a major gene plus polygene model. Results: In the orthogonal crosses, the CVs for the four nutritional traits ranged at 2.710&ndash:7.879%, 4.086&ndash:11.070%, 2.724&ndash:6.727%, and 3.717&ndash:9.602%. In the reciprocal crosses, CVs ranged at 2.710&ndash:8.053%, 4.086&ndash:9.572%, 2.724&ndash:6.376%, and 3.717&ndash:8.845%. All traits exhibited normal or skewed-normal distributions. For oil content in undelinted/delinted seeds, polygenic heritabilities in the orthogonal cross were 0.64/0.52, and 0.40/0.36 in the reciprocal cross. For protein content, major-gene heritabilities in the orthogonal cross were 0.79 (undelinted) and 0.78 (delinted), while those in the reciprocal cross were both 0.62. Conclusions: Oil and protein contents in cottonseeds are quantitative traits. In both orthogonal and reciprocal crosses, oil content is controlled by multiple genes and is shaped by additive, dominance, and epistatic effects. Protein content, in contrast, is largely controlled by two major genes along with minor genes. In the P1 ×: P2 combination, major genes act through additive, dominance, and epistatic effects, while in the P2 ×: P1 combination, their effects are additive only. In both combinations, minor genes contribute through additive and dominance effects. In summary, the oil content in cottonseed is mainly regulated by polygenes, whereas the protein content is primarily determined by major genes. These genetic features in both linted, and lint-free seeds may offer a theoretical foundation for molecular breeding aimed at improving cottonseed oil and protein quality.
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