Login / Signup

DEFECTIVE ENDOSPERM-D1 (Dee-D1) is crucial for endosperm development in hexaploid wheat.

Natalia TikhenkoAhmad M AlqudahLioudmilla BorisjukStefan OrtlebTwan RuttenDanDan WuManuela NagelAxel HimmelbachMartin MascherMarion S RöderMartin W GanalStefanie SehmischAnastassia BoudichevskaiaAndreas Börner
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
Hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a natural allopolyploid and provides a usable model system to better understand the genetic mechanisms that underlie allopolyploid speciation through the hybrid genome doubling. Here we aimed to identify the contribution of chromosome 1D in the development and evolution of hexaploid wheat. We identified and mapped a novel DEFECTIVE ENDOSPERM-D1 (Dee-D1) locus on 1DL that is involved in the genetic control of endosperm development. The absence of Dee-D1 leads to non-viable grains in distant crosses and alters grain shape, which negatively affects grain number and thousand-grain weight. Dee-D1 can be classified as speciation locus with a positive effect on the function of genes which are involved in endosperm development in hybrid genomes. The presence of Dee-D1 is necessary for the normal development of endosperm, and thus play an important role in the evolution and improvement of grain yield in hexaploid wheat.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • body mass index
  • dna methylation
  • lymph node
  • physical activity
  • weight gain
  • genome wide identification