4.7 Review

Potential of rice tillering for sustainable food production

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erad422

Keywords

Climate change; food sustainability; grain yield; panicle number; quantitative trait locus (QTL); Oryza sativa; rice; strigolactones; tillering

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This review focuses on the mechanisms underlying rice tiller development and highlights the potential of utilizing tillering for sustainable food production. The MP3 gene, as a promising QTL, has the potential to increase grain yield and adapt to climate change and nutrient-poor environments.
Tillering, also known as shoot branching, is a fundamental trait for cereal crops such as rice to produce sufficient panicle numbers. Effective tillering that guarantees successful panicle production is essential for achieving high crop yields. Recent advances in molecular biology have revealed the mechanisms underlying rice tillering; however, in rice breeding and cultivation, there remain limited genes or alleles suitable for effective tillering and high yields. A recently identified quantitative trait locus (QTL) called MORE PANICLES 3 (MP3) has been cloned as a single gene and shown to promote tillering and to moderately increase panicle number. This gene is an ortholog of the maize domestication gene TB1, and it has the potential to increase grain yield under ongoing climate change and in nutrient-poor environments. This review reconsiders the potential and importance of tillering for sustainable food production. Thus, I provide an overview of rice tiller development and the currently understood molecular mechanisms that underly it, focusing primarily on the biosynthesis and signaling of strigolactones, effective QTLs, and the importance of MP3 (TB1). The possible future benefits in using promising QTLs such as MP3 to explore agronomic solutions under ongoing climate change and in nutrient-poor environments are also highlighted. Recent advances in the mechanisms underlying rice tiller development are reviewed, with a focus on the potential of utilizing tillering for sustainable food production under climate change.

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