Dosage differences in 12-OXOPHYTODIENOATE REDUCTASE genes modulate wheat root growth

Author:

Gabay GiladORCID,Wang Hanchao,Zhang JunliORCID,Moriconi Jorge I.ORCID,Burguener German F.ORCID,Gualano Leonardo D.ORCID,Howell TysonORCID,Lukaszewski AdamORCID,Staskawicz Brian,Cho Myeong-JeORCID,Tanaka JaclynORCID,Fahima Tzion,Ke Haiyan,Dehesh Katayoon,Zhang Guo-Liang,Gou Jin-YingORCID,Hamberg MatsORCID,Santa-María Guillermo E.ORCID,Dubcovsky JorgeORCID

Abstract

AbstractWheat, 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.

Funder

United States - Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

United States Department of Agriculture | Agricultural Research Service

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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