Abstract

BackgroundGood establishment is important for rapid leaf area development in wheat crops. Poor establishment results in fewer, later-emerging plants, reduced leaf area and tiller number. In addition, poorly established crops suffer from increased soil moisture loss through evaporation and greater competition from weeds while fewer spikes are produced which can reduce grain yield. By protecting the emerging first leaf, the coleoptile is critical for achieving good establishment, and its length and interaction with soil physical properties determine the ability of a cultivar to emerge from depth.ResultsHere we characterise a locus on chromosome 1AS, that increases coleoptile length in wheat, which we designate as Lcol-A1. We identified Lcol-A1 by bulked-segregant analysis and used a Halberd-derived population to fine map the gene to a 2 cM region, equivalent to 7 Mb on the IWGSC genome reference sequence of Chinese Spring (RefSeqv1.0). By sowing recently released cultivars and near-isogenic lines in the field at both conventional and deep sowing depths, we confirmed that Locl-A1 was associated with increased emergence from depth in the presence and absence of conventional dwarfing genes. Flanking markers IWB58229 and IWA710 were developed to assist breeders to select for long coleoptile wheats.ConclusionsIncreased coleoptile length is sought in many global wheat production areas to improve crop emergence. The identification of the gene Lcol-A1, together with tools to allow wheat breeders to track the gene, will enable improvements to be made for this important trait.

Highlights

  • Good establishment is important for rapid leaf area development in wheat crops

  • We show that the gene promotes coleoptile length in current elite germplasm, and that longer coleoptiles result in better emergence in both tall and semi-dwarf wheat lines when sown deep in the field

  • Genomic regions associated with long coleoptiles Halberd and Uruguay386 are tall wheats known for their long coleoptiles

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Summary

Introduction

Good establishment is important for rapid leaf area development in wheat crops. Poor establishment results in fewer, later-emerging plants, reduced leaf area and tiller number. Poorly established crops suffer from increased soil moisture loss through evaporation and greater competition from weeds while fewer spikes are produced which can reduce grain yield. Most semi-dwarf cultivars grown worldwide have relatively short coleoptiles due to the presence of dwarfing genes Rht-B1b and Rht-D1b [23]. These genes encode mutant DELLA proteins that are negative regulators of growth with a large negative effect on coleoptile length which is associated with poor establishment in the field [1, 2, 15, 42]. Several studies have found variation for coleoptile length within semi-dwarf wheats, suggesting that loci which increase coleoptile length can be selected for in semi-dwarf backgrounds [1, 5]

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