TY - JOUR
T1 - Sparse panicle1 is required for inflorescence development in Setaria viridis and maize
AU - Huang, Pu
AU - Jiang, Hui
AU - Zhu, Chuanmei
AU - Barry, Kerrie
AU - Jenkins, Jerry
AU - Sandor, Laura
AU - Schmutz, Jeremy
AU - Box, Mathew S.
AU - Kellogg, Elizabeth A.
AU - Brutnell, Thomas P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/4/18
Y1 - 2017/4/18
N2 - Setaria viridis is a rapid-life-cycle model panicoid grass. To identify genes that may contribute to inflorescence architecture and thus have the potential to influence grain yield in related crops such as maize, we conducted an N-nitroso-N-methylurea (NMU) mutagenesis of S. viridis and screened for visible inflorescence mutant phenotypes. Of the approximately 2,700 M 2 families screened, we identified four recessive sparse panicle mutants (spp1-spp4) characterized by reduced and uneven branching of the inflorescence. To identify the gene underlying the sparse panicle1 (spp1) phenotype, we performed bulked segregant analysis and deep sequencing to fine map it to an approximately 1a €...Mb interval. Within this interval, we identified disruptive mutations in two genes. Complementation tests between spp1 and spp3 revealed they were allelic, and deep sequencing of spp3 identified an independent disruptive mutation in SvAUX1 (AUXIN1), one of the two genes in the a 1/41a €...Mb interval and the only gene disruption shared between spp1 and spp3. SvAUX1 was found to affect both inflorescence development and root gravitropism in S. viridis. A search for orthologous mutant alleles in maize confirmed a very similar role of ZmAUX1 in maize, which highlights the utility of S. viridis in accelerating functional genomic studies in maize.
AB - Setaria viridis is a rapid-life-cycle model panicoid grass. To identify genes that may contribute to inflorescence architecture and thus have the potential to influence grain yield in related crops such as maize, we conducted an N-nitroso-N-methylurea (NMU) mutagenesis of S. viridis and screened for visible inflorescence mutant phenotypes. Of the approximately 2,700 M 2 families screened, we identified four recessive sparse panicle mutants (spp1-spp4) characterized by reduced and uneven branching of the inflorescence. To identify the gene underlying the sparse panicle1 (spp1) phenotype, we performed bulked segregant analysis and deep sequencing to fine map it to an approximately 1a €...Mb interval. Within this interval, we identified disruptive mutations in two genes. Complementation tests between spp1 and spp3 revealed they were allelic, and deep sequencing of spp3 identified an independent disruptive mutation in SvAUX1 (AUXIN1), one of the two genes in the a 1/41a €...Mb interval and the only gene disruption shared between spp1 and spp3. SvAUX1 was found to affect both inflorescence development and root gravitropism in S. viridis. A search for orthologous mutant alleles in maize confirmed a very similar role of ZmAUX1 in maize, which highlights the utility of S. viridis in accelerating functional genomic studies in maize.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85017573836
U2 - 10.1038/nplants.2017.54
DO - 10.1038/nplants.2017.54
M3 - Article
C2 - 28418381
AN - SCOPUS:85017573836
SN - 2055-026X
VL - 3
JO - Nature Plants
JF - Nature Plants
M1 - 17054
ER -