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A comprehensive phenotypic investigation of the “Pod-shattering syndrome” in common bean

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Citazione:
A comprehensive phenotypic investigation of the “Pod-shattering syndrome” in common bean / Murgia, Maria Leonarda; Attene, Giovanna; Rodriguez, Monica; Bitocchi, Elena; Bellucci, Elisa; Fois, Davide; Nanni, Laura; Gioia, Tania; Albani, Diego Maria; Papa, Roberto; Rau, Domenico. - In: FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE. - ISSN 1664-462X. - 8:(2017), p. 251. [10.3389/fpls.2017.00251]
Abstract:
Seed shattering in crops is a key domestication trait due to its relevance for seed dispersal, yield, and fundamental questions in evolution (e.g., convergent evolution). Here, we focused on pod shattering in common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), the most important legume crop for human consuption in the world. With this main aim, we developed a methodological pipeline that comprises a thorough characterization under field conditions, including also the chemical composition and histological analysis of the pod valves. The pipeline was developed based on the assumption that the shattering trait itself can be treated in principle as a “syndrome” (i.e., a set of correlated different traits) at the pod level. We characterized a population of 267 introgression lines that were developed ad-hoc to study shattering in common bean. Three main objectives were sought: (1) to dissect the shattering trait into its “components,” of level (percentage of shattering pods per plant) and mode (percentage of pods with twisting or non-twisting valves); (2) to test whether shattering is associated to the chemical composition and/or the histological characteristics of the pod valves; and (3) to test the associations between shattering and other plant traits. We can conclude the following: Very high shattering levels can be achieved in different modes; shattering resistance is mainly a qualitative trait; and high shattering levels is correlated with high carbon and lignin contents of the pod valves and with specific histological charaterstics of the ventral sheath and the inner fibrous layer of the pod wall. Our data also suggest that shattering comes with a “cost,” as it is associated with lowpod size, low seed weight per pod, high pod weight, and low seed to pod-valves ratio; indeed, it can be more exaustively described as a syndrome at the pod level. Our work suggests that the valve chemical composition (i.e., carbon and lignin content) can be used for a high troughput phenotyping procedures for shattering phenotyping. Finally, we believe that the application of our pipeline will greatly facilitate comparative studies among legume crops, and gene tagging.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Cell wall analysis; Common bean; Domestication; Domestication syndrome; Element composition analysis; Phenotypic analysis; Shattering; Plant Science
Elenco autori:
Murgia, Maria Leonarda; Attene, Giovanna; Rodriguez, Monica; Bitocchi, Elena; Bellucci, Elisa; Fois, Davide; Nanni, Laura; Gioia, Tania; Albani, Diego Maria; Papa, Roberto; Rau, Domenico
Autori di Ateneo:
ALBANI Diego Maria
RAU Domenico
RODRIGUEZ Monica
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.uniss.it/handle/11388/175384
Link al Full Text:
https://iris.uniss.it//retrieve/handle/11388/175384/163954/Paper_19_Murgia.et.al.2017_fpls.pdf
Pubblicato in:
FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Journal
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URL

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.00251/full
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