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Enlisting wild grass genes to combat nitrification in wheat farming: A nature-based solution

Authors :
Biología vegetal y ecología
Landaren biologia eta ekologia
Subbarao, Guntur V.
Kishii, Masahiro
Bozal Leorri, Adrián
Ortiz Monasterio, Iván
Gao, Xiang
Ibba, Maria Itria
Karwat, Hannes
González Moro, María Begoña
González Murua, María del Carmen Begoña
Yoshihashi, Tadashi
Tobita, Satoshi
Kommerell, Victor
Braun, Hans-Joachim
Iwanaga, Masa
Biología vegetal y ecología
Landaren biologia eta ekologia
Subbarao, Guntur V.
Kishii, Masahiro
Bozal Leorri, Adrián
Ortiz Monasterio, Iván
Gao, Xiang
Ibba, Maria Itria
Karwat, Hannes
González Moro, María Begoña
González Murua, María del Carmen Begoña
Yoshihashi, Tadashi
Tobita, Satoshi
Kommerell, Victor
Braun, Hans-Joachim
Iwanaga, Masa
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Active nitrifiers and rapid nitrification are major contributing factors to nitrogen losses in global wheat production. Suppressing nitrifier activity is an effective strategy to limit N losses from agriculture. Production and release of nitrification inhibitors from plant roots is termed "biological nitrification inhibition" (BNI). Here, we report the discovery of a chromosome region that controls BNI production in "wheat grass" Leymus racemosus (Lam.) Tzvelev, located on the short arm of the "Lr#3Ns(b)" (Lr#n), which can be transferred to wheat as T3BL.3Ns(b)S (denoted Lr#n-SA), where 3BS arm of chromosome 3B of wheat was replaced by 3Ns(b)S of L. racemosus. We successfully introduced T3BL.3Ns(b)S into the wheat cultivar "Chinese Spring" (CS-Lr#n-SA, referred to as "BNI-CS"), which resulted in the doubling of its BNI capacity. T3BL.3Ns(b)S from BNI-CS was then transferred to several elite high-yielding hexaploid wheat cultivars, leading to near doubling of BNI production in "BNI-MUNAL" and "BNI-ROELFS." Laboratory incubation studies with root-zone soil from field-grown BNI-MUNAL confirmed BNI trait expression, evident from suppression of soil nitrifier activity, reduced nitrification potential, and N2O emissions. Changes in N metabolism included reductions in both leaf nitrate, nitrate reductase activity, and enhanced glutamine synthetase activity, indicating a shift toward ammonium nutrition. Nitrogen uptake from soil organic matter mineralization improved under low N conditions. Biomass production, grain yields, and N uptake were significantly higher in BNI-MUNAL across N treatments. Grain protein levels and breadmaking attributes were not negatively impacted. Wide use of BNI functions in wheat breeding may combat nitrification in high N input-intensive farming but also can improve adaptation to low N input marginal areas.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
We gratefully acknowledge funding support from Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, CGIAR Research Program on WHEAT during the execution of the research presented in this study., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286735073
Document Type :
Electronic Resource