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Ethylene-gibberellin signaling underlies adaptation of rice to periodic flooding.

Takeshi KurohaKeisuke NagaiRico GamuyaoDiane R WangTomoyuki FurutaMasanari NakamoriTakuya KitaokaKeita AdachiAnzu MinamiYoshinao MoriKiyoshi MashiguchiYoshiya SetoShinjiro YamaguchiMikiko KojimaHitoshi SakakibaraJianzhong WuKaworu EbanaNobutaka MitsudaMasaru Ohme-TakagiShuichi YanagisawaMasanori YamasakiRyusuke YokoyamaKazuhiko NishitaniToshihiro MochizukiGen TamiyaSusan R McCouchMotoyuki Ashikari
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Most plants do poorly when flooded. Certain rice varieties, known as deepwater rice, survive periodic flooding and consequent oxygen deficiency by activating internode growth of stems to keep above the water. Here, we identify the gibberellin biosynthesis gene, SD1 (SEMIDWARF1), whose loss-of-function allele catapulted the rice Green Revolution, as being responsible for submergence-induced internode elongation. When submerged, plants carrying the deepwater rice-specific SD1 haplotype amplify a signaling relay in which the SD1 gene is transcriptionally activated by an ethylene-responsive transcription factor, OsEIL1a. The SD1 protein directs increased synthesis of gibberellins, largely GA4, which promote internode elongation. Evolutionary analysis shows that the deepwater rice-specific haplotype was derived from standing variation in wild rice and selected for deepwater rice cultivation in Bangladesh.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • signaling pathway
  • gene expression
  • endothelial cells
  • drug induced
  • dna binding
  • protein protein