Abstract

BackgroundRoot system architecture is an important trait affecting the uptake of nutrients and water by crops. Shallower root systems preferentially take up nutrients from the topsoil and help avoid unfavorable environments in deeper soil layers. We have found a soil-surface rooting mutant from an M2 population that was regenerated from seed calli of a japonica rice cultivar, Nipponbare. In this study, we examined the genetic and physiological characteristics of this mutant.ResultsThe primary roots of the mutant showed no gravitropic response from the seedling stage on, whereas the gravitropic response of the shoots was normal. Segregation analyses by using an F2 population derived from a cross between the soil-surface rooting mutant and wild-type Nipponbare indicated that the trait was controlled by a single recessive gene, designated as sor1. Fine mapping by using an F2 population derived from a cross between the mutant and an indica rice cultivar, Kasalath, revealed that sor1 was located within a 136-kb region between the simple sequence repeat markers RM16254 and 2935-6 on the terminal region of the short arm of chromosome 4, where 13 putative open reading frames (ORFs) were found. We sequenced these ORFs and detected a 33-bp deletion in one of them, Os04g0101800. Transgenic plants of the mutant transformed with the genomic fragment carrying the Os04g0101800 sequence from Nipponbare showed normal gravitropic responses and no soil-surface rooting.ConclusionThese results suggest that sor1, a rice mutant causing soil-surface rooting and altered root gravitropic response, is allelic to Os04g0101800, and that a 33-bp deletion in the coding region of this gene causes the mutant phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Root system architecture is an important trait affecting the uptake of nutrients and water by crops

  • Root system architecture is an important trait for plant growth and crop yield because it affects the uptake of nutrients and water, which are unevenly distributed in the soil

  • These results revealed that our mutant is a novel mutant for soil-surface rooting

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Summary

Introduction

Root system architecture is an important trait affecting the uptake of nutrients and water by crops. Root system architecture is an important trait for plant growth and crop yield because it affects the uptake of nutrients and water, which are unevenly distributed in the soil. Indonesian rice (Oryza sativa L.) cultivars that belong to the Bulu ecotype develop thick primary roots above and near the soil surface (Lafitte et al 2001; Ueno and Sato 1989, 1992). These authors suggested that soil-surface and shallow roots contribute to the avoidance of hypoxic soils in rice. Soil-surface and shallow roots may contribute to the avoidance of hypoxic environments and promote rice growth

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