Genetic Screening for Mutants with Altered Seminal Root Numbers in Hexaploid Wheat Using a High-Throughput Root Phenotyping Platform
Date Issued
2019-09Date Online
2019-09Type
Journal ArticleAccessibility
Open AccessUsage rights
Copyrighted; all rights reservedMetadata
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Shorinola, Oluwaseyi; Kaye, Ryan; Golan, Guy; Peleg, Zvi; Kepinski, Stefan; Uauy, Cristobal. 2019. Genetic Screening for Mutants with Altered Seminal Root Numbers in Hexaploid Wheat Using a High-Throughput Root Phenotyping Platform. G3 9: 2799-2809
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129397
Abstract/Description
Roots are the main channel for water and nutrient uptake in plants. Optimization of root architecture provides a viable strategy to improve nutrient and water uptake efficiency and maintain crop productivity under water-limiting and nutrient-poor conditions. We know little, however, about the genetic control of root development in wheat, a crop supplying 20% of global calorie and protein intake. To improve our understanding of the genetic control of seminal root development in wheat, we conducted a high-throughput screen for variation in seminal root number using an exome-sequenced mutant population derived from the hexaploid wheat cultivar Cadenza. The screen identified seven independent mutants with homozygous and stably altered seminal root number phenotypes. One mutant, Cadenza0900, displays a recessive extra seminal root number phenotype, while six mutants (Cadenza0062, Cadenza0369, Cadenza0393, Cadenza0465, Cadenza0818 and Cadenza1273) show lower seminal root number phenotypes most likely originating from defects in the formation and activation of seminal root primordia. Segregation analysis in F2 populations suggest that the phenotype of Cadenza0900 is controlled by multiple loci whereas the Cadenza0062 phenotype fits a 3:1 mutant:wild-type segregation ratio characteristic of dominant single gene action. This work highlights the potential to use the sequenced wheat mutant population as a forward genetic resource to uncover novel variation in agronomic traits, such as seminal root architecture.
CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
Oluwaseyi Shorinolahttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3516-303X
Subjects
WHEAT;Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
Hebrew University of Jerusalem; International Livestock Research Institute; John Innes Centre; University of LeedsInvestors/sponsors
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, United Kingdom; Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Israel; Royal SocietyCollections
- ILRI articles in journals [6643]
