Genetic variation underlying differential ammonium and nitrate responses in Arabidopsis thaliana

Author:

Katz Ella1ORCID,Knapp Anna1ORCID,Lensink Mariele12ORCID,Keller Caroline Kaley13ORCID,Stefani Jordan1ORCID,Li Jia-Jie1ORCID,Shane Emily1ORCID,Tuermer-Lee Kaelyn1ORCID,Bloom Arnold J1ORCID,Kliebenstein Daniel J14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California Davis , Davis, California 95616, USA

2. Integrative Genetics and Genomics Graduate Group, University of California Davis , Davis, California 95616, USA

3. Plant Biology Graduate Group, University of California Davis , Davis, California 95616, USA

4. DynaMo Center of Excellence, University of Copenhagen , 1165 Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Nitrogen is an essential element required for plant growth and productivity. Understanding the mechanisms and natural genetic variation underlying nitrogen use in plants will facilitate the engineering of plant nitrogen use to maximize crop productivity while minimizing environmental costs. To understand the scope of natural variation that may influence nitrogen use, we grew 1,135 Arabidopsis thaliana natural genotypes on two nitrogen sources, nitrate and ammonium, and measured both developmental and defense metabolite traits. By using different environments and focusing on multiple traits, we identified a wide array of different nitrogen responses. These responses are associated with numerous genes, most of which were not previously associated with nitrogen responses. Only a small portion of these genes appear to be shared between environments or traits, while most are predominantly specific to a developmental or defense trait under a specific nitrogen source. Finally, by using a large population, we were able to identify unique nitrogen responses, such as preferring ammonium or nitrate, which appear to be generated by combinations of loci rather than a few large-effect loci. This suggests that it may be possible to obtain novel phenotypes in complex nitrogen responses by manipulating sets of genes with small effects rather than solely focusing on large-effect single gene manipulations.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Directorate for Biological Sciences, Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences

Division of Integrative Organismal Systems

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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