4.7 Article

Dissection of canopy layer-specific genetic control of leaf angle in Sorghum bicolor by RNA sequencing

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-021-08251-4

Keywords

Differentially expressed genes; Leaf angle; RNA sequencing; Smart canopy; Sorghum; Quantitative trait loci

Funding

  1. Plant Sciences Institute
  2. R.F. Baker Center for Plant Breeding at Iowa State University
  3. United States Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture [IOW04314]
  4. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service project [5030-21220-006-00D]

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This study characterized the canopy-layer specific transcriptome of sorghum and identified differentially expressed genes related to leaf angle. The candidate genes are involved in various biological processes such as transmembrane transport, hormone regulation, oxidation-reduction, and photosynthesis. Further investigation is needed to understand the potential pleiotropic effects of these genes.
Background Leaf angle is an important plant architecture trait, affecting plant density, light interception efficiency, photosynthetic rate, and yield. The smart canopy model proposes more vertical leaves in the top plant layers and more horizontal leaves in the lower canopy, maximizing conversion efficiency and photosynthesis. Sorghum leaf arrangement is opposite to that proposed in the smart canopy model, indicating the need for improvement. Although leaf angle quantitative trait loci (QTL) have been previously reported, only the Dwarf3 (Dw3) auxin transporter gene, colocalizing with a major-effect QTL on chromosome 7, has been validated. Additionally, the genetic architecture of leaf angle across canopy layers remains to be elucidated. Results This study characterized the canopy-layer specific transcriptome of five sorghum genotypes using RNA sequencing. A set of 284 differentially expressed genes for at least one layer comparison (FDR < 0.05) co-localized with 69 leaf angle QTL and were consistently identified across genotypes. These genes are involved in transmembrane transport, hormone regulation, oxidation-reduction process, response to stimuli, lipid metabolism, and photosynthesis. The most relevant eleven candidate genes for layer-specific angle modification include those homologous to genes controlling leaf angle in rice and maize or genes associated with cell size/expansion, shape, and cell number. Conclusions Considering the predicted functions of candidate genes, their potential undesirable pleiotropic effects should be further investigated across tissues and developmental stages. Future validation of proposed candidates and exploitation through genetic engineering or gene editing strategies targeted to collar cells will bring researchers closer to the realization of a smart canopy sorghum.

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