Abstract

Hemp, Cannabis sativa L., is a sustainable multipurpose fiber crop with high nutrient and water use efficiency and with biomass of excellent quality for textile fibers and construction materials. The yield and quality of hemp biomass are largely determined by the genetic background of the hemp cultivar but are also strongly affected by environmental factors, such as temperature and photoperiod. Hemp is a facultative short-day plant, characterized by a strong adaptation to photoperiod and a great influence of environmental factors on important agronomic traits such as “flowering-time” and “sex determination.” This sensitivity of hemp can cause a considerable degree of heterogeneity, leading to unforeseen yield reductions. Fiber quality for instance is influenced by the developmental stage of hemp at harvest. Also, male and female plants differ in stature and produce fibers with different properties and quality. Next to these causes, there is evidence for specific genotypic variation in fiber quality among hemp accessions. Before improved hemp cultivars can be developed, with specific flowering-times and fiber qualities, and adapted to different geographical regions, a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling important phenological traits such as “flowering-time” and “sex determination” in relation to fiber quality in hemp is required. It is well known that genetic factors play a major role in the outcome of both phenological traits, but the major molecular factors involved in this mechanism are not characterized in hemp. Genome sequences and transcriptome data are available but their analysis mainly focused on the cannabinoid pathway for medical purposes. Herein, we review the current knowledge of phenotypic and genetic data available for “flowering-time,” “sex determination,” and “fiber quality” in short-day and dioecious crops, respectively, and compare them with the situation in hemp. A picture emerges for several controlling key genes, for which natural genetic variation may lead to desired flowering behavior, including examples of pleiotropic effects on yield quality and on carbon partitioning. Finally, we discuss the prospects for using this knowledge for the molecular breeding of this sustainable crop via a candidate gene approach.

Highlights

  • The Complex Interactions Between Flowering Behavior and Fiber Quality in hemp stem sections (Hemp)Hemp is a facultative short-day plant, characterized by a strong adaptation to photoperiod and a great influence of environmental factors on important agronomic traits such as “flowering-time” and “sex determination.”

  • hemp stem sections (Hemp) (Cannabis sativa L.) is increasingly attractive as multipurpose crop for the sustainable production of fibers, oils, and cannabinoids (Van der Werf et al, 1996; Struik et al, 2000; Callaway, 2004; Karus and Vogt, 2004; Van der Werf, 2004; Barth and Carus, 2015; Andre et al, 2016, and references therein)

  • Auxin efflux transporter required for secondary wall formation in fibers (Arabidopsis); upregulated in bast fibers of older, thicker, and more lignified stem sections (Hemp) Catalyzes the methylation of monolignols, the lignin precursors; upregulated in bast fibres of older, thicker, and more lignified hemp stem sections (Arabidopsis; Hemp) Synthesis of feruloylated polysaccharides; upregulated in bast fibres of older, thicker, and more lignified hemp stem sections (Arabidopsis; Hemp) Involved in lignin biosynthesis; several are upregulated in bast fibres of older, thicker, and more lignified hemp stem sections (Hemp) Putatively involved in lignin deposition (Hemp)

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Summary

The Complex Interactions Between Flowering Behavior and Fiber Quality in Hemp

Hemp is a facultative short-day plant, characterized by a strong adaptation to photoperiod and a great influence of environmental factors on important agronomic traits such as “flowering-time” and “sex determination.”. This sensitivity of hemp can cause a considerable degree of heterogeneity, leading to unforeseen yield reductions. Before improved hemp cultivars can be developed, with specific flowering-times and fiber qualities, and adapted to different geographical regions, a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling important phenological traits such as “flowering-time” and “sex determination” in relation to fiber quality in hemp is required. We review the current knowledge of phenotypic and genetic data available for “flowering-time,” “sex determination,” and “fiber quality” in short-day and dioecious crops, respectively, and compare them with the situation in hemp.

INTRODUCTION
TRANSITION TO THE REPRODUCTIVE STAGE AND BAST FIBER QUALITY OF HEMP
THE DIVERSE ROLES OF GIBBERELLIC ACID AND OTHER PHYTOHORMONES
GENETIC COMPONENTS OF SEX DETERMINATION
PLEIOTROPIC EFFECTS AND CARBON PARTITIONING
FLOWERING LOCUS T FLOWERING LOCUS T
DELLA protein GAI
WALLS ARE THIN
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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