Grain Disarticulation in Wild Wheat and Barley

Author:

Pourkheirandish Mohammad1ORCID,Komatsuda Takao2

Affiliation:

1. School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, University of Melbourne , Royal Parade, Parkville, Melbourne, VIC, 3010, Australia

2. Crop Research Institute, Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Jinan, Shandong 250100, China

Abstract

Abstract Our industrial-scale crop monocultures, which are necessary to provide grain for large-scale food and feed production, are highly vulnerable to biotic and abiotic stresses. Crop wild relatives have adapted to harsh environmental conditions over millennia; thus, they are an important source of genetic variation and crop diversification. Despite several examples where significant yield increases have been achieved through the introgression of genomic regions from wild relatives, more detailed understanding of the differences between wild and cultivated species for favorable and unfavorable traits is still required to harness these valuable resources. Recently, as an alternative to the introgression of beneficial alleles from the wild into domesticated species, a radical suggestion is to domesticate wild relatives to generate new crops. A first and critical step for the domestication of cereal wild relatives would be to prevent grain disarticulation from the inflorescence at maturity. Discovering the molecular mechanisms and understanding the network of interactions behind grain retention/disarticulation would enable the implementation of approaches to select for this character in targeted species. Brittle rachis 1 and Brittle rachis 2 are major genes responsible for grain disarticulation in the wild progenitors of wheat and barley that were the target of mutations during domestication. These two genes are only found in the Triticeae tribe and are hypothesized to have evolved by a duplication followed by neo-functionalization. Current knowledge gaps include the molecular mechanisms controlling grain retention in cereals and the genomic consequences of strong selection for this essential character.

Funder

Australian Research Council Discovery

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Invitational Fellowships

Research in Japan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Physiology,General Medicine

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