Dosage differences in 12-OXOPHYTODIENOATE REDUCTASE genes modulate wheat root growth
基因
生物
遗传学
植物
生物技术
作者
Gilad Gabay,Hanchao Wang,Junli Zhang,Jorge I. Moriconi,Germán Burguener,Leonardo D. Gualano,T. A. Howell,Adam J. Lukaszewski,Brian J. Staskawicz,Myeong‐Je Cho,Jaclyn Tanaka,Tzion Fahima,Haiyan Ke,Katayoon Dehesh,Guo-Liang Zhang,Jin‐Ying Gou,Mats Hámberg,Guillermo E. Santa-Marı́a,Jorge Dubcovsky
Abstract Wheat, an essential crop for global food security, is well adapted to a wide variety of soils. However, the gene networks shaping different root architectures remain poorly understood. We report here that dosage differences in a cluster of monocot-specific 12-OXOPHYTODIENOATE REDUCTASE genes from subfamily III ( OPRIII ) modulate key differences in wheat root architecture, which are associated with grain yield under water-limited conditions. Wheat plants with loss-of-function mutations in OPRIII show longer seminal roots, whereas increased OPRIII dosage or transgenic over-expression result in reduced seminal root growth, precocious development of lateral roots and increased jasmonic acid (JA and JA-Ile). Pharmacological inhibition of JA-biosynthesis abolishes root length differences, consistent with a JA-mediated mechanism. Transcriptome analyses of transgenic and wild-type lines show significant enriched JA-biosynthetic and reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathways, which parallel changes in ROS distribution. OPRIII genes provide a useful entry point to engineer root architecture in wheat and other cereals.