4.7 Article

Impacts of environmental conditions, and allelic variation of cytosolic glutamine synthetase on maize hybrid kernel production

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COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
卷 4, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02598-w

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  1. Genoplante [GNP_B04]
  2. ANR/Genoplante [NUE-MAIZE PCS-09GENM-127]

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The study investigated the agronomic potential of cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS1) in maize kernel production by overexpressing the enzyme in leaf cells, resulting in a 3.8% increase in kernel yield in transgenic hybrids compared to controls in various environments. Association mapping revealed significant correlations between polymorphisms in GS1 genes and kernel yield, indicating that GS1 expression plays a direct role in kernel production and has the potential to lead to high yielding maize hybrids depending on environmental conditions.
Cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS1) is the enzyme mainly responsible of ammonium assimilation and reassimilation in maize leaves. The agronomic potential of GS1 in maize kernel production was investigated by examining the impact of an overexpression of the enzyme in the leaf cells. Transgenic hybrids exhibiting a three-fold increase in leaf GS activity were produced and characterized using plants grown in the field. Several independent hybrids overexpressing Gln1-3, a gene encoding cytosolic (GS1), in the leaf and bundle sheath mesophyll cells were grown over five years in different locations. On average, a 3.8% increase in kernel yield was obtained in the transgenic hybrids compared to controls. However, we observed that such an increase was simultaneously dependent upon both the environmental conditions and the transgenic event for a given field trial. Although variable from one environment to another, significant associations were also found between two GS1 genes (Gln1-3 and Gln1-4) polymorphic regions and kernel yield in different locations. We propose that the GS1 enzyme is a potential lead for producing high yielding maize hybrids using either genetic engineering or marker-assisted selection. However, for these hybrids, yield increases will be largely dependent upon the environmental conditions used to grow the plants. Amiour et al. use a multi-year field trial evaluation and association mapping to determine if increased enzyme activity and native allelic variations at the GS1 loci in maize contribute to differences in grain yield. Overexpression of GS1 and polymorphisms in the corresponding loci were associated with kernel yield, indicating that GS1 expression can directly control kernel production and that GS1 has a potential lead in the production of high yielding maize hybrids depending on environmental conditions.

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