| Literature DB >> 21251102 |
Umar Masood Quraishi1, Michael Abrouk, Florent Murat, Caroline Pont, Séverine Foucrier, Gregory Desmaizieres, Carole Confolent, Nathalie Rivière, Gilles Charmet, Etienne Paux, Alain Murigneux, Laurent Guerreiro, Stéphane Lafarge, Jacques Le Gouis, Catherine Feuillet, Jerome Salse.
Abstract
Monitoring nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) in plants is becoming essential to maintain yield while reducing fertilizer usage. Optimized NUE application in major crops is essential for long-term sustainability of agriculture production. Here, we report the precise identification of 11 major chromosomal regions controlling NUE in wheat that co-localise with key developmental genes such as Ppd (photoperiod sensitivity), Vrn (vernalization requirement), Rht (reduced height) and can be considered as robust markers from a molecular breeding perspective. Physical mapping, sequencing, annotation and candidate gene validation of an NUE metaQTL on wheat chromosome 3B allowed us to propose that a glutamate synthase (GoGAT) gene that is conserved structurally and functionally at orthologous positions in rice, sorghum and maize genomes may contribute to NUE in wheat and other cereals. We propose an evolutionary model for the NUE locus in cereals from a common ancestral region, involving species specific shuffling events such as gene deletion, inversion, transposition and the invasion of repetitive elements.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21251102 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2010.04461.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417