Sweet Sorghum Originated through Selection of Dry, a Plant-Specific NAC Transcription Factor Gene
Author(s) -
Limin Zhang,
Chuan-Yuan Leng,
Hong Luo,
XiaoYuan Wu,
Zhiquan Liu,
Yumiao Zhang,
Hong Zhang,
Yan Xia,
Li Shang,
Chunming Liu,
Dongyun Hao,
Yihua Zhou,
Chengcai Chu,
Hongwei Cai,
HaiChun Jing
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.18.00313
Subject(s) - biology , sorghum , domestication , crop , agronomy , sweet sorghum , botany , gene , cultivar , dry weight , germination , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics
Sorghum ( Sorghum bicolor ) is the fifth most popular crop worldwide and a C 4 model plant. Domesticated sorghum comes in many forms, including sweet cultivars with juicy stems and grain sorghum with dry, pithy stems at maturity. The Dry locus, which controls the pithy/juicy stem trait, was discovered over a century ago. Here, we found that Dry gene encodes a plant-specific NAC transcription factor. Dry was either deleted or acquired loss-of-function mutations in sweet sorghum, resulting in cell collapse and altered secondary cell wall composition in the stem. Twenty-three Dry ancestral haplotypes, all with dry, pithy stems, were found among wild sorghum and wild sorghum relatives. Two of the haplotypes were detected in domesticated landraces, with four additional dry haplotypes with juicy stems detected in improved lines. These results imply that selection for Dry gene mutations was a major step leading to the origin of sweet sorghum. The Dry gene is conserved in major cereals; fine-tuning its regulatory network could provide a molecular tool to control crop stem texture.
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom