4.7 Article

Speed breeding short-day crops by LED-controlled light schemes

Journal

THEORETICAL AND APPLIED GENETICS
Volume 133, Issue 8, Pages 2335-2342

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00122-020-03601-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL - Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy of Germany [ZF4279901CR6]
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany [031B0339A, 031B0339B]
  3. Ministerium fur Landlichen Raum und Verbraucherschutz Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany [23-8230.15]

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Key message A simple and rapid speed breeding system was developed for short-day crops that enables up to five generations per year using LED lighting systems that allow very specific adjustments regarding light intensity and quality. Plant breeding is a key element for future agricultural production that needs to cope with a growing human population and climate change. However, the process of developing suitable cultivars is time-consuming, not least because of the long generation times of crops. Recently, speed breeding has been introduced for long-day crops, but a similar protocol for short-day crops is lacking to date. In this study, we present a speed breeding protocol based on light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that allow to modify light quality, and exemplarily demonstrate its effectiveness for the short-day crops soybean (Glycine max), rice (Oryza sativa) and amaranth (Amaranthus spp.). Adjusting the photoperiod to 10 h and using a blue-light enriched, far-red-deprived light spectrum facilitated the growth of short and sturdy soybean plants that flowered similar to 23 days after sowing and matured within 77 days, thus allowing up to five generations per year. In rice and amaranth, flowering was achieved similar to 60 and similar to 35 days after sowing, respectively. Interestingly, the use of far-red light advanced flowering by 10 and 20 days in some amaranth and rice genotypes, respectively, but had no impact on flowering in soybeans, highlighting the importance of light quality for speed breeding protocols. Taken together, our short-day crops' speed breeding protocol enables several generations per year using crop-specific LED-based lighting regimes, without the need of tissue culture tools such as embryo rescue. Moreover, this approach can be readily applied to a multi-storey 96-cell tray-based system to integrate speed breeding with genomics, toward a higher improvement rate in breeding.

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