Hyun-Su Park, Man-Kee Baek, Jung-Pil Suh, O-Young Jeong, Chang-Min Lee, Choon-Song Kim, Ji-Ung Jeung, Woo-Jae Kim, Jong-Min Jeong, Youngjun Mo, Su-Keyong Ha, Hyun Gu Choi, Seul-Gi Park, Mina Jin, Jae-Ryoung Park, Jeonghwan Seo, Songhee Park
Korean. J. Breed. Sci. 2025;57(3):301-313. Published online September 1, 2025
The intermediate breeding material ‘JJ625LG’ was developed to diversify the grain shape characteristics of Korean japonica rice cultivars. ‘JJ625LG’ was derived from a cross between ‘HR30198-AC33 (DGS79),’ a japonica breeding material with extra-long and spindle-shaped grains, and ‘Boramchan,’ a high-yielding japonica cultivar with excellent cultivation stability and medium-short and semi-round grains. By employing both bulk and pedigree breeding methods, strong selection pressure was applied to eliminate undesirable traits inherited from ‘DGS79,’ such as very late heading, long awns, and susceptibility to lodging. Consequently, elite lines with long spindle-shaped grains on a japonica background were selected. These lines subsequently underwent yield performance and local adaptability tests, during which their agronomic traits were comprehensively evaluated, leading to the final selection of ‘JJ625LG.’ The heading date of ‘JJ625LG’ was August 16th, three days later than that of ‘Nampyeong’. Its culm length was similar to ‘Nampyeong.’ ‘JJ625LG’ exhibited a higher number of spikelets per panicle, fewer panicles per plant, and heavier 1,000-grain weight than brown rice. Additionally, it showed strong resistance to bacterial blight (races K1, K2, and K3) but was susceptible to viral diseases and insect pests, indicating the need for further improvement in these areas. Its grain yield was comparable to that of ‘Nampyeong.’ With a brown rice grain length of 6.34 mm, ‘JJ625LG’ was classified as a long-grain type and had a grain length-to-width ratio of 2.64, reflecting a spindle-shaped morphology. It carried the GW2-gs3-qSW5 allele combination associated with grain shape, which is a genetic profile not found in existing Korean japonica cultivars. Although its milling recovery rate was similar to that of ‘Nampyeong,’ the presence of many broken rice due to its long grain shape resulted in a lower percentage of head rice. The eating quality of ‘JJ625LG’ was excellent, with its grains exhibiting the sticky and soft texture typical of japonica rice and receiving high scores in sensory evaluation. As the first intermediate breeding material in Korea with long and spindle-shaped grains in a japonica background, ‘JJ625LG’ is expected to contribute significantly to diversifying the traditionally narrow grain shape spectrum of Korean japonica rice cultivars (Registration No. 10166).