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Induced Variations in Brassinosteroid Genes Define Barley Height and Sturdiness, and Expand the Green Revolution Genetic Toolkit

Authors :
Mats Hansson
Arnis Druka
Simon P. Gough
Jerome D. Franckowiak
Jana Oklestkova
Ilze Druka
Udda Lundqvist
Burkhard Schulz
Joakim Lundqvist
André H. Müller
Anna Janeczko
Damian Gruszka
Marzena Kurowska
Izabela Matyszczak
Christoph Dockter
Ilka Braumann
Marek Marzec
Shakhira Zakhrabekova
Source :
Plant Physiology. 166:1912-1927
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2014.

Abstract

Reduced plant height and culm robustness are quantitative characteristics important for assuring cereal crop yield and quality under adverse weather conditions. A very limited number of short-culm mutant alleles were introduced into commercial crop cultivars during the Green Revolution. We identified phenotypic traits, including sturdy culm, specific for deficiencies in brassinosteroid biosynthesis and signaling in semidwarf mutants of barley (Hordeum vulgare). This set of characteristic traits was explored to perform a phenotypic screen of near-isogenic short-culm mutant lines from the brachytic, breviaristatum, dense spike, erectoides, semibrachytic, semidwarf, and slender dwarf mutant groups. In silico mapping of brassinosteroid-related genes in the barley genome in combination with sequencing of barley mutant lines assigned more than 20 historic mutants to three brassinosteroid-biosynthesis genes (BRASSINOSTEROID-6-OXIDASE, CONSTITUTIVE PHOTOMORPHOGENIC DWARF, and DIMINUTO) and one brassinosteroid-signaling gene (BRASSINOSTEROID-INSENSITIVE1 [HvBRI1]). Analyses of F2 and M2 populations, allelic crosses, and modeling of nonsynonymous amino acid exchanges in protein crystal structures gave a further understanding of the control of barley plant architecture and sturdiness by brassinosteroid-related genes. Alternatives to the widely used but highly temperature-sensitive uzu1.a allele of HvBRI1 represent potential genetic building blocks for breeding strategies with sturdy and climate-tolerant barley cultivars.

Details

ISSN :
15322548
Volume :
166
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5414aea89b40912878b22074191023e5