摘要

Transposable elements, as the most active genetic factors, have driven genome evolution in maize and reshaped certain key loci responsible for maize domestication, exemplified by an inserted transposon in teosinte branched1 (tb1), which controls plant architecture. In this study, we detected an insertion of a transposable element in the second exon of the coding sequence of the maize starch synthase gene SSIIb, leading to a splicing modification and gene frameshift. This insertion provided a means of determining the function of SSIIb for starch synthesis during maize domestication. Association and quantitative trait locus (QTL) mappings showed that SSIIb was not associated with starch eating quality and total starch content of kernel, and two maize near-isogenic-line-like lines with and without the insertion of the transposable element further exhibited the same starch content of kernel and leaf; in addition, nucleotide diversity analysis revealed that maize SSIIb was not under selection during domestication. All these results demonstrated that maize SSIIb might serve as a very minor genetic factor or a functional redundancy gene in starch synthesis. Global BLAST showed that the maize genome harbored 1,387 copies of this transposable element, of which 135 copies were located in genic regions. At least three genes beside maize SSIIb were disturbed by this transposable element. Five patterns of transposition, according to the insertion sites close to or within genes such as maize SSIIb in this study, are under discussion and a large quantity of present/absent variations due to the insertion of varieties of transposable elements, discovered by revolutionary next-generation sequencing, would rapidly accelerate QTL and association mappings for maize domestication through candidate gene tactics in the near future.