Abstract

Our long-term goal is to develop a Swedish winter oat (Avena sativa). To identify molecular differences that correlate with winter hardiness, a winter oat model comprising of both non-hardy spring lines and winter hardy lines is needed. To achieve this, we selected 294 oat breeding lines, originating from various Russian, German, and American winter oat breeding programs and tested them in the field in south- and western Sweden. By assaying for winter survival and agricultural properties during four consecutive seasons, we identified 14 breeding lines of different origins that not only survived the winter but also were agronomically better than the rest. Laboratory tests including electrolytic leakage, controlled crown freezing assay, expression analysis of the AsVrn1 gene and monitoring of flowering time suggested that the American lines had the highest freezing tolerance, although the German lines performed better in the field. Finally, six lines constituting the two most freezing tolerant lines, two intermediate lines and two spring cultivars were chosen to build a winter oat model system. Metabolic profiling of non-acclimated and cold acclimated leaf tissue samples isolated from the six selected lines revealed differential expression patterns of 245 metabolites including several sugars, amino acids, organic acids and 181 hitherto unknown metabolites. The expression patterns of 107 metabolites showed significant interactions with either a cultivar or a time-point. Further identification, characterisation and validation of these metabolites will lead to an increased understanding of the cold acclimation process in oats. Furthermore, by using the winter oat model system, differential sequencing of crown mRNA populations would lead to identification of various biomarkers to facilitate winter oat breeding.

Highlights

  • Oat is the sixth most important cereal crop in the world [1]

  • We collected various accessions from Germany, Russia and the USA that had been bred for winter hardiness

  • Winter survival and agronomic characteristics such as yield, panicle density per square meter, time of maturity, and lodging resistance of surviving lines were evaluated in the 2003/2004 growing season

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Summary

Introduction

Oat is the sixth most important cereal crop in the world [1]. 900,000 ton of oat was harvested per year in Sweden (www.jordbruksverket.se). Only spring oats are grown in Sweden, several European countries grow winter oats, which allow an earlier harvest and give comparably higher yields. Winter oats are more environmentally beneficial than spring oats, as during the winter, cultivated fields bind nutrients and reduce soil erosion. No winter oat cultivar exists that is hardy enough to be grown commercially in Sweden. Since winter hardiness is a quantitative trait controlled by several genes [2], the traditional plant breeding programs have so far been of limited success in improving the winter hardiness of oats

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