Identification and Validation of QTLs for Macronutrient Contents in Brown and Milled Rice Using Two Backcross Populations between Oryza sativa and O. rufipogon

Mineral malnutrition as a prevalent public health issue can be alleviated by increasing the intake of dietary minerals from major staple crops, such as rice. Identification of the gene responsible for mineral contents in rice would help breed cultivars enriched with minerals through marker-assisted selection. Two segregating populations of backcross inbred lines (BIL) were employed to map quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for macronutrient contents in brown and milled rice, BC1F5, and BC2F4:5 derived from an interspecific cross of Xieqingzao B (Oryza sativa) and Dongxiang wild rice (O. rufipogon). Phenotyping the populations was conducted in multiple locations and years, and up to 169 DNA markers were used for the genotyping. A total of 17 QTLs for P, K, Na, Ca, and Mg contents in brown and milled rice distributed on eight regions were identified in the BC1F5 population, which is explained to range from 5.98% to 56.80% of phenotypic variances. Two regions controlling qCa1.1 and qCa4.1 were validated, and seven new QTLs for Ca and Mg contents were identified in the BC2F4:5 population. 18 of 24 QTLs were clustered across seven chromosomal regions, indicating that different mineral accumulation might be involved in common regulatory pathways. Of 24 QTLs identified in two populations, 16 having favorable alleles were derived from O. rufipogon and 10 were novel. These results will not only help understand the molecular mechanism of macronutrient accumulation in rice but also provide candidate QTLs for further gene cloning and grain nutrient improvement through QTL pyramiding.


Introduction
Mineral nutrients are vital for human health, and more than 25 minerals are required by humans. These minerals can be obtained directly from the daily diet in an appropriate amount [1], and the important minerals are phosphorus (P), sodium (Na), potassium (K), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), and manganese (Mn). Macroelements, such as P, K, Na, Mg, and Ca, play a pivotal role in the metabolic functions of fluid balance, neurotransmission, blood pressure regulation, and human's immune system [2,3]. Although the micronutrient Fe, Zn, and I deficiencies are very common worldwide, macronutrient Mg and Ca deficiencies are serious in some countries [4,5] and spread across more countries recently [6,7]. The deficiencies might be partly due to high dietary dependence on a few major staple cereals lacking adequate essential minerals.
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is one of the most important staple foods for over half of the global population. Rice grains store macronutrients (P, K, Mg, and Ca) as well as micronutrients (Fe, Zn, Cu, and Mn) for seed germination and seedling growth [8][9][10]. Rice grain could be a source of energy and mineral nutrients for rice seedling and human development. Mineral deficiencies may be improved by enhancing grain mineral nutrients. However, most of modern high-yielding rice cultivars do not have sufficient essential minerals to meet the daily dietary requirement, especially in most preferred consumption of polished rice [11]. It is a growing demand to enhance essential mineral contents in rice grain through breeding-based biofortification approaches. Wide variations have been observed for grain mineral contents in diverse rice genotypes [12], which provide a desirable potential to breed rice varieties enriched with essential nutrient. Understanding the genetic basis of mineral accumulation in rice is imperative and will greatly facilitate the enhancement of mineral nutrient in the rice breeding program [13].
Quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping is a powerful and desirable approach to explore the chromosomal regions controlling quantitative traits for the marker-assisted selection (MAS) strategy in rice. Up to now, a larger number of QTLs associated with mineral contents in rice have been identified using various mapping populations derived from biparental inter-or intra-subspecific and interspecific crosses [5,11,[13][14][15][16]. Using the RILs from the intra-subspecific cross Zhenshan 97/Miyang 46, Yu et al. [13] identified 20 QTLs for P, K, Mg, Ca, Zn, Mn, and Cu contents in milled rice and Wang et al. [5] identified 51 and 61 QTLs for the contents of 13 and 15 minerals including P, K, Na, Mg, and Ca in brown rice and straw, respectively. Garcia-Oliveira et al. [15] identified 31 QTLs for P, K, Mg, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn, and Cu contents in brown rice using introgression lines (ILs) from an interspecific cross of cultivar "Teqing" and Yunnan wild rice (O. rufipogon). Using both RILs and backcross introgression lines (BILs) from an inter-subspecific cross Lemont/Teqing, Zhang et al. [16] reported 134 QTLs for the contents of 16 minerals including P, K, Mg, and Ca in brown rice, which were scattered over 39 genomic regions in 12 rice chromosomes. Descalsota-Empleo et al. [11] mapped 50 QTLs for 13 mineral contents in milled rice, including P, K, Na, Mg, and Ca, using two sets of doubled haploid (DH) lines from two inter-subspecific crosses IR64/IR69428 and BR29/IR75862. In addition, Du et al. [14] identified 23 and 9 QTLs for seven mineral contents including P, K, Mg, and Ca in brown rice in the Lingshui and Hangzhou ecological environments, respectively. Of them, only two QTLs for the Mg content were simultaneously identified across two environments, implying that the environment impacts the detection of QTL for grain mineral contents.
Wild species have a high diversity of desirable genes for agronomic traits, and their allelic variation is an important gene pool for genetic improvement [17]. It has been proved that wild rice has much higher contents of minerals than cultivated rice [18,19], which makes wild rice valuable for biofortification of rice cultivars with enhanced mineral contents.
Dongxiang wild rice (O. rufipogon Griff., DWR) is a common wild rice in the northernmost habitat in China and even the world (latitude: 28 o 14' N), which harbors various valuable genes for improving many traits in rice, i.e., biotic and abiotic stresses [20]. A set of backcross inbred lines (BILs) at BC 1 F 5 derived from an interspecific cross cultivar of Xieqingzao B and an accession of DWR were employed to identify QTLs for planthopper resistance [21], cold tolerance [20], and heavy metal content [22]. In the present study, we conducted QTL mapping for the contents of major macronutrients in brown and milled rice using the BILs and then validated the primarily identified QTLs for Mg and Ca contents using the BILs with increasing genetic homogeneity in the maternal XB background. The main objective was to identify candidate QTLs for macronutrient contents in rice for further fine mapping and cloning. The identified QTLs and favorable alleles from O. rufipogon could be used for developing rice varieties with enriched mineral nutrients.

Materials and Methods
2.1. Plant Materials. Two mapping populations derived from an interspecific cross between a cultivar of Xieqingzao B (XB) (Oryza sativa L.) and an accession of Dongxiang wild rice (O. rufipogon Griff.) were used in the present study. The first population, consisting of 202 BC 1 F 5 BILs previously reported by Chen et al. [23], was used to the initial map QTL for the P, K, Na, Mg, and Ca contents in the present study. XB is an indica maintainer line of dwarf-abortive cytoplasmic male sterile line Xieqingzao A, bred by the Rice Research Institute, Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences, in the 1980s.
The second population, consisting of 132 BC 2 F 4:5 BILs, was used to verify QTL for Mg and Ca contents detected in the BC 1 F 5 population and identify new QTL in a more homogenous background. This population was developed from a plant in the BC 1 F 5 population as described and illustrated in Figure 1. The BC 1 F 5 BIL plant A58 was backcrossed with recurrent parent XB and selfed to generate 415 BC 2 F 2 plants.
After one generation of selfing, the BC 2 F 2:3 lines were assayed with 186 polymorphic simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers distributed across 12 chromosomes. The 186 polymorphic SSR markers included 108 SSRs in the original XB/XB//DWR map [23,24], 78 other SSRs were selected from the Gramene database (http://www.gramene .org/). Of them, 52 SSRs were heterozygous at these loci in the population. Hereafter, these 50 SSRs were used to genotype 415 BC 2 F 2:3 lines. Based on genotypic and phenotypic data, five BC 2 F 3 plants from four BC 2 F 2:3 family lines were selected to generate the BC 2 F 4 population. Further selection with these markers and agronomic traits resulted in 132 plants from the five BC 2 F 4 populations (72 plants for each population), and they were selfed to generate 132 BC 2 F 4:5 lines. The resulting BC 2 F 4:5 lines were genetically more homogenous in the XB background than their parental BC 1 F 5 and, thus, were used to verify the QTLs detected in the BC 1 F 5 population and further identify new QTLs. Approximately 0.5 g flour of each sample was added into a 50 mL polypropylene tube and digested with 8.0 mL 68-70% nitric acid (HNO 3 ) and 2.0 mL 70% perchloric acid (HClO 3 ) using a digital block digestion system (model ED54, Labtech Inc., Beijing, China). The digestion procedure was as follows: the digestion tube was heated at 80°C for 0.5 hr, 150°C for 2 hrs, and 180°C until 0.5 mL solution remained. After cooling at room temperature, the final digested residues were diluted to 25 mL with doubledeionized water. The contents of P, K, Na, Mg, and Ca in the digested solutions were simultaneously determined using an inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometer (IRIS Intrepid II XSP, Thermo Electron Corporation, Milford, MA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The certified standards (National Institute Center of Standards in China) in flour samples (GBW10010, CRM Rice) were employed to calibrate the contents of five macronutrients. All the measurements were performed in duplication and the average value over two duplications was used for data analysis.
2.5. DNA Marker Analysis. Total genomic DNA was extracted following the protocol described by Chen et al. [23]. PCR amplification was performed according to Chen et al. [25]. The PCR products were visualized on 2.5% agarose gel stained with GelRed (Biotium, Hayward, CA, USA) or 6% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel using silver staining.

Map Construction and Data
Analysis. Linkage map of the BC 1 F 5 population was constructed using simple sequence repeat (SSR) and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) markers previously by Chen et al. [23] and updated by Huang et al. [24]. The updated map consisted of 149 DNA markers including 108 SSR markers and 41 RFLPs and spanned 1306.4 cM. The linkage map for the BC 2 F 4:5 population consisted of 186 SSRs which were constructed using MapMaker/Exp 3.0 [26]. The map distance between genetic markers was determined using the Kosambi function and presented in centimorgan. Statistics were performed for mean, standard deviation (SD), coefficient of variation (CV), skewness, and kurtosis of the phenotypic traits in all trials using the Command DSum of the software Windows QTL Cartographer 2.5 [27]. Pearson's correlation coefficients between the traits were calculated using IBM SPSS Statistics 19. QTL analysis was conducted using the composite interval mapping (CIM) approach of the Windows QTL Cartographer 2.5 [27]. The CIM were performed using the default parameters with backward and forward regressions with a probability threshold of 0.01. The LOD threshold larger than 2.5 was

Results
3.1. Performance of K, P, Na, Mg, and Ca Contents in Brown and Milled Rice. The contents of the five macroelements in brown and milled rice collected from two mapping populations in each trial were presented in Table 1. In all the trials, the contents of the five macronutrients were continuously distributed with the absolute value of skewness and kurtosis less than 1, except for P, K, Na, and Mg contents in milled rice for the HZ12, a typical pattern of quantitative in heritance (Table 1).
For brown rice measured in the BC 1 F 5 population in both LS11 and HZ12 trials, the average contents of P, K, and Ca in brown rice were higher in the HZ12 trial than in the LS11 trial, but similar for Na and Mg. For brown rice from the BC 2 F 4:5 population in both HZ16 and HZ17 trials, the average contents of Mg and Ca were higher in the HZ16 trial than in the HZ17 trial (Table 1). These results indicated that the contents of macronutrient in rice were affected by the growing environments, especially the soil (Supplementary Table 1), but the magnitude of influence varied among elements. Pearson correlation analysis indicated that a significantly negative correlation (r = −0:45, P < 0:01) was only observed for Na between the LS11 and HZ12 trials and no significant correlation was observed for the remaining four macronutrients.
For both the brown and milled rice in the HZ12 and HZ17 trials, the contents of macronutrients in milled rice were lower than those in brown rice. In the HZ12 trial, the average contents of five macronutrients of the BC 1 F 5 population in milled rice showed a decrease of 57.14% for P, 57.82% for K, 58.14% for Na, 65.28% for Mg, and 57.10% for Ca, when compared with those in brown rice. Similarly, the reductions of 64.15% for P, 63.50% for K, 8.74% for Na, 75.54% for Mg, and 31.24% for Ca, were observed in the milled rice from the brown rice for parental XB. Pearson correlation analysis indicated that a significantly positive correlation was observed for Na, P, and Ca between brown and milled rice, with the correlation coefficients of 0.65 (P < 0:01), 0.17 (P < 0:05), and 0.16 (P < 0:05), respectively, and no significant relationship was observed for the remaining two macronutrients. In the HZ17 trial, the average contents of Mg and Ca in milled rice of the BC 2 F 4:5 population decreased by 88.12% and 51.99%, respectively, compared to those in brown rice. Likewise for XB, the decreases in the milled rice from the brown rice were 84.14% and 49.29%, respectively, for Mg and Ca contents. The results showed that these macroelements were largely contained in rice bran rather than endosperm. In other words, most of the macroelements in rice are removed during the milling process, which is previously reported [8,9]. The average contents of Mg and Ca in brown and milled rice of the BC 2 F 4:5 population in both HZ16 and HZ17 trials were lower than those of the BC 1 F 5 population in the HZ12 trial. Furthermore, the differences between the average contents of Mg and Ca in brown and milled rice of the BC 2 F 4:5 population and XB were smaller than those of the BC 1 F 5 population and XB. This explained that the BC 2 F 4:5 population was more homogenous in the XB background than the BC 1 F 5 population.
Correlations between each pair of the macronutrients within a rice type and a trial were presented in Table 2. One significantly negative correlation was observed for Na-Ca in the LS11 trial, while six significantly positive correlations were found in the LS11 trial ranging from 0.75 to 0.98. For the HZ12 trial, there were six significantly positive correlations ranging from 0.34 to 0.97 in either the brown or milled rice, with an odd for Na-Ca, negative (−0.13) in the brown rice but positive (0.41) in the milled rice. All other correlations were either insignificant or low. Overall, the correlations of P-K, P-Mg, and K-Mg were high for all the types of rice samples and trials.

QTLs
Detected in the BC 1 F 5 Population. In total, 20 QTLs for the five macronutrient contents were claimed from both the LS11 and HZ12 trials in both the brown and rice samples, eight in brown rice showing in the LS11 trial only, seven in brown rice showing in the HZ12 trials only, and five in the milled rice showing in the HZ12 trials ( Table 3). The identified QTLs were distributed on eight chromosomes of 1-4, 6-7, 9, and 12 ( Figure 2). The proportion of phenotypic variance explained by a single QTL (R 2 ) ranged from 5.70 to 56.80%. The qNa1 for Na was found on chromosome 1 flanked by RM315 and RG236 in both brown and milled rice from the HZ12 trial, which was considered as a duplicate QTL. Therefore, the total number of the identified QTLs decreased to 17. Fourteen of these QTLs formed five clusters ( Figure 2).
The largest cluster on chromosome 9 consisted of four QTLs, followed by two clusters of three QTLs on chromosomes 4 and 12. In the RM316-RZ698 region on chromosome 9, the XB allele increased P, K, Mg, and Ca contents in brown rice by 276.52 mg/kg, 148.38 mg/kg, 127.30 mg/kg, and 9.38 mg/kg, respectively (Table 3). In the QTL regions in the vicinity of RM142 on chromosome 4, the DWR allele increased P, Mg, and Ca contents in brown rice by 276.47 mg/kg, 101.80 mg/kg, and 22.94 mg/kg, respectively. In the RM101-RG463 region on chromosome 12, the DWR allele increased P, K, and Mg contents in milled rice by 546.40 mg/kg, 312.64 mg/kg, and 199.10 mg/kg, respectively. All three QTLs, qP12, qK12, and qMg12, had their corresponding highest R 2 value of 53.17%, 33.07%, and 56.80%, respectively.
The other two clusters on chromosomes 1 and 3 each included two QTLs. In the RM315-RG236 region on chromosome 1, the DWR allele increased Ca and Na contents in brown rice and Na content in milled rice by 12.84 mg/kg, 3.35 mg/kg, and 3.48 mg/kg, respectively. It is noted that only one QTL exhibited significant effects on the same macronutrient content in both brown and milled rice. The RG482-RZ519 region on chromosome 3 showed significant effects on P and Mg contents in brown rice, with the DWR allele increasing the two traits by 401.37 mg/kg and 172.90 mg/kg, respectively.

BioMed Research International
In the remaining three regions, one QTL for the K content and two QTLs for the Ca content in each region were detected in the LS11 and HZ12 trials, respectively. They were qCa1.1 located in the RM5359-RG173 region on chromosome 1, qK2 in RM250-RM213 on chromosome 2, and qCa7 in RM214-RG678 on chromosome 7.  Table 4). Four QTLs for the Mg content and six for the Ca content were identified in both HZ16 and HZ17 trials, including qCa1.1 and qCa4.1, and the others in only one of the trials ( Figure 3 and Table 4). The qCa1.1 for both brown and milled rice Ca contents on chromosome 1 was discovered in the HZ17 trial, making the total number of the identified QTLs down to 9. The R 2 value for brown rice ranged from 13.50% to 17.20% and 19.60% to 19.90% in the HZ16 and HZ17 trials, respectively, and the R 2 value for the milled rice in the HZ17 trial was 17.70% to 63.39%.
Four and three QTLs for the Ca content in both the HZ16 and HZ17 trials (Figure 3 and Table 4) explained 13.5% to 17.2% and 19.60% to 53.38% of the phenotypic variation, respectively. Of them, two segregating QTL regions of the BC 2 F 4:5 population (Figure 3) were covered or neighbored by the QTLs for the Ca content in the BC 1 F 5 population, including qCa1.1 in the interval RM5359-RG173 on chromosome 1 and qCa4.1 in the interval RG499-RM142 on chromosome 4. The DWR alleles of the qCa1.1 consistently decreased the brown rice Ca content, while the alleles in qCa4.1 increased the brown rice Ca content in both the HZ16 and HZ17 trials (Tables 3 and 4). Additionally, the qCa1.1 showed significant effects on the Ca content in milled  " * " and " * * " represent significance levels of P < 0:05 and 0.01, respectively. 5 BioMed Research International rice in the HZ17 trial. qCa1.1 and qCa4.1 were consistent across both HZ16 and HZ17 trials, respectively.
The other three QTLs identified in the BC 2 F 4:5 population were not detected in the BC 1 F 5 population. One of them, qCa6.1 in the region of RM588-RM204 on chromosome 6, showed significant effects on the brown rice Ca content in the HZ16 trial, and its DWR allele increased the Ca content by 10.11 mg/kg (Table 4). In the neighboring region of qCa6.1 between RM276 and RG64 in the BC 1 F 5 population, qCa6 for the milled rice Ca content was identified, in which favorable alleles were derived from DWR. At the qCa4.2 and qCa11, dominant XB alleles increased the milled and brown rice Ca contents by 2.98 mg/kg and 5.17 mg/kg, respectively, with R 2 of 53.38% and 13.50%.
One and three QTLs were detected for both the brown and milled rice Mg contents in the HZ16 and HZ17 trials, respectively, with R 2 from 15.50% to 73.39%. The QTL qMg1 had the XB allele with a partial dominant effect that increased the Mg content in brown rice by 41.76 mg/kg. The remaining three QTLs, qMg4.1, qMg9.1, and qMg11 had the enhancing alleles from DWR and showed the overdominant, partially dominant, and additive effects, respectively.

Discussion
In general, the mineral nutrient content is very low in rice, even though it serves as a major staple food for half the world's population. Therefore, a rice-based diet is associated with mineral deficiency in rice-consuming people. A slight increment of the mineral content in rice should effectively alleviate erupting dietary deficiency worldwide [29]. The increment relies on breeding rice varieties with enhanced mineral nutrient contents using MAS [30]. Identification of QTLs controlling mineral contents in rice is the prerequisite for pyramiding of QTL for mineral biofortification with MAS.

Genetic and Environmental Effects on Macronutrient
Content QTL Detection. Using various mapping populations from the same cross phenotype across environments could help eliminate genetic and environmental noise for dissecting consistent QTL. In the present study, we used a same interspecific cross between Xieqingzao B (Oryza sativa L.) and Dongxiang wild rice (O. rufipogon Griff.) to generate two populations of BC 1 F 5 and BC 2 F 4:5 BILs for QTL analysis across two environments and two seasons, respectively. As a result, 17 QTLs for macronutrient contents in brown and milled rice were initially identified in BC 1 F 5 BILs, and then, 9 QTLs for Ca and Mg contents were in BC 2 F 4:5 BILs in which the background should be more homogeneous than that of the BC 1 F 5 BILs. In addition, more QTLs with higher statistical significance and effectiveness were resulted from the BC 2 F 4:5 BILs than from the BC 1 F 5 BILs. The higher significance and effectiveness might be due to a high genetic homogeneity of 72.04% at 186 marker loci in the XB genetic background, indicating that BC 2 F 4:5 BILs are more appropriate to detect QTL with smaller effect than BC 1 F 5 BILs. The result is in accord with the findings reported by Zhang et al. [16].
Mineral contents in rice were influenced by multiple factors [14,22], especially the soil. The climate in Lingshui, Hainan, is a typical tropical monsoonal, with sufficient sunshine and abundant rainfall, while that in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, is a    [15,16] A * indicates an additive effect of replacing a Xieqingzao B allele by a Dongxiang wild rice allele; R 2 indicates the proportion of phenotypic variance explained by the QTL effect. 7 BioMed Research International to 313.4 mg/kg −1 with an average content of 197.4 mg/kg −1 , which were higher than the values ranging from 61.7 to 208.6 mg/kg −1 with a mean value of 133.0 mg/kg −1 in the LS11 trial. Consistent with previous studies [14,22,31], 17 QTLs for macronutrient contents in BC 1 F 5 BILs were all environment specific. These results suggested that different environmental factors, especially the soil, affected the accumulations of the macronutrients as well as QTL detection. However, it is notable that two QTLs, qCa1.1 and qCa4.1, were validated with constant allelic directions by identification across populations and seasons. These environment-specific and/or stable QTLs across environments with consistent allelic effects are of great importance, which provided good candidates for rice biofortification breeding and further gene cloning.

QTL Cluster for Macronutrient
Contents. QTL clusters for multi-macronutrient contents in this study are in line with previous reports [5,11,[14][15][16]. In total, 14 and 4 of the QTLs in the BC 1 F 5 and BC 2 F 4:5 populations were clustered over five and two genomic regions distributed on six chromosomes, respectively. Among them, six regions were also reported in previous studies and the remaining regions were novel. Three genomic regions of eight QTL clusters were especially important. One super QTL cluster on chromosome 9 contained qP9, qK9, qCa9, and qMg9, of which qK9 was also identified for the K content in brown rice reported previously [16]. The second QTL cluster qP12/qK12/qMg12 was within the interval RM101-RG463 on chromosome 12. Three QTLs in this region, qP12, qK12 and qMg12, all had the largest R 2 and favorable alleles from O. rufipogon, of which qP12 and qMg12 were reported in previous studies [15,16,32]. The remaining QTL cluster qCa1.1/qMg1.1 was adjacent to the interval in the vicinity of RM5359 on chromosome 1, of which qCa1.1 was across two mapping populations and three trials, providing a good candidate for enhancing the Ca content in both the brown and milled rice. In addition, further fine mapping and cloning are required to confirm the allelic relationships of these QTL clusters.
The significant correlations of macronutrient contents with each other were observed, and those correlations were the same in both the brown and milled rice samples. Notably, the highly positive correlations were found for each pair of K, P, Mg, and Ca contents in the brown and milled rice samples in both HZ12 and LS11 trials. Their high correlations have been previously reported [5,16]. Accordingly, two QTL clusters for K-P-Mg contents in brown and milled rice were colocated on chromosomes 9 and 12, respectively. These QTL clusters demonstrate that the pleiotropic gene or tightly linked genes controlling different macronutrient contents were located on the same chromosomal region, probably   Figure 3: Chromosomal positions of the QTLs conferring Mg and Ca contents in brown and milled rice in the BC 2 F 4:5 population of Xieqingzao B/Dongxiang wild rice. QTLs on the right and left hand sides of the chromosomes indicate their origination from the HZ16 and HZ17 trials, respectively. 8 BioMed Research International because these different macronutrients are involved in the common regulatory pathways. Once the synergistic associations for these macronutrients are confirmed, the improvement of the macronutrient contents could be very effective because a single effort in rice breeding practices could result in an enhancement of the multi-macronutrient content simultaneously.

Comparison of QTLs for Macronutrient Contents between
Present and Previous Studies. Based on the physical position of flanking markers, we compared the similarity for the QTLs identified in the present study with earlier reports for the same macronutrient within a physical distance of 1 Mb. Of 24 QTLs, 14 were coincident with previous studies and 10 were novel QTLs. qP12 and qK9 accorded with a QTL related to the P content [15,16,32] and K content [16], respectively, in previous reports. The qMg1 coincided with qMg1.1 for the Mg content in milled rice [11], qMg3 with qMg3-1 [15] and qMg3.2 [5], qMg9 with qMg9.1 for brown rice [5] and qMg9 for milled rice [33], qMg11 with qMg11.1 [11] and qMg11 [33], and qMg12 with qMg12-1 [15]. qCa1.1 and qCa1.2 accorded with qCa1.1 for the Ca content in milled rice [34] and a QTL for brown rice [35,36], respectively, qCa4.2 with a QTL for the Ca content in brown rice [15,16], qCa6.1 with qCa6.2 and qCa6 for brown rice [5,37] and qCa6 for milled rice [13], qCa9 with a QTL for the Ca content in brown rice in earlier studies [15,36], qCa11 with a QTL for brown rice reported by Du et al. [14], and qNa1 with qNa1 for the Na content [37]. These QTLs across diverse genetic backgrounds and environments are considered as consensus QTLs. They are worthy of exploiting the full potential for biofortifying rice with enriched macronutrient in breeding practices, while effort should be focused on the identification of molecular markers tightly linked to the target QTLs for MAS breeding. Moreover, these consensus QTLs in various studies are also good candidates for verification of allelic effects, fine mapping, and cloning. A large number of genes involved in mineral absorption and translocation have been isolated and characterized in rice. As expected, some potential genes related to macronutrient uptake, transportation, and homeostasis in rice were within the chromosomal regions of the QTLs in present study. These QTL regions harbor the following potential genes, such as OsPAP10c for P, OsHAK2 for Na, OsCNGC4, OsCNGC5, OsKCO3, and OsCNGC17 for K; OsMGT3 for Mg; and OsEFCAX1, OsCam1-3, OsCAX3, OsCCX5, and OsCML6 for Ca. Interestingly, OsEFCAX1 (LOC_Os01g11414) and OsCam1-3 (LOC_Os01g16240) for Ca are present within the qCa1.1/qMg1 regions consistently across multiexperiments of the present study (Figures 2 and 3), which are involved in calciummediated signaling and homeostasis and expressed in all tissues including seeds [38,39]. It would be important to generate near-isogenic lines differing in alleles at these gene loci on the XB genetic background for investigation of the relationships with the QTLs identified in the present study.

Utilization of Dongxiang Wild Rice for Rice
Biofortification Breeding. To satisfy the growing demand of food and dietary nutrition security in the rice-consuming population, more and more attention has been focused on enhancing the contents of essential nutrients while decreasing the concentrations of toxic metals in rice grain. However, the complex interactions between toxic elements and essential nutrients add difficulty to this global effort [40]. Previously, we have used the same BC 1 F 5 BILs to map QTL for grain yield with contributing components [24]. In the previous and present studies, we have reported eight QTLs for yield components and six QTLs for macronutrient contents which distribute over four chromosomal regions or clusters on chromosomes 4, 6, 7, and 12. Two major clusters on chromosomes 4 and 12 holding four QTLs are qTGW-12 and qMg12/qP12/qK12 and qSF-4/qNFGP-4/qGYD-4 and qCa4.2. These two clusters demonstrate that the DWR alleles have synergistic effects for yield and macronutrient traits in the QTL regions on chromosomes 4 and 12. Many other reports have revealed the synergistic effects, as well [31,34,41]. The remaining two clusters on chromosomes 6 and 7 harbor three QTLs, qNFGP-6/qSF-6, qCa6.1, and qNFSP-7/qTFGP-7/qCa7. However, the DWR alleles in the clustered QTLs on chromosomes 6 and 7 showed the opposite allele effects on the macronutrient content and yield components. These results demonstrate that the O. rufipogon alleles in favor of some traits may be unfavorable to the others. These deleterious associations between grain mineral nutrients and yield traits have been reported previously [5,11,16,42]. Interruption of deleterious linkages should be done before those desirable genes could be transferred from O. rufipogon into O. sativa in cultivar improvement.
Up to now, much efforts have been made to exploit favorable alleles from wild rice species for grain quality enhancement [43], grain yield, and resistance improvement [44]. Wild rice is rich in some essential nutrients in comparison of cultivated rice [18,19]. Dongxiang wild rice is the progenitor of cultivated rice, having numerous favorable alleles [21,45]. These alleles are widely utilized in genomic and breeding studies for improvement of important agronomic traits. Notably, 11 of 17 (64.70%) and 5 of 9 (55.55%) QTLs in the BC 1 [15,46,47]. These results suggest that wild relatives of rice cultivar may greatly contribute to improving grain mineral nutrient contents in cultivated species of O. sativa. They have precious potentials for the biofortification of cultivated rice with enhanced grain mineral contents. Introgression of favorable alleles from O. rufipogon may introduce some unfavorable allele into elite rice cultivars because of their tight linkage. It becomes important to interrupt these types of linkage for breeding rice varieties for integrating grain yield with mineral traits.