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Researchers Reveal Genetic and Evolutionary Characteristics of Tricotyledony in Sand Rice

Updatetime:2023-09-26From:

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Known as a pioneer herb on the moving sand dunes of Central Asia, sand rice has been recommended as a potential future crop due to its excellent drought tolerance and rich nutritional value. 

Tricotyledony is an occasional occurrence in dicotyledonous plants, including sand rice, mainly due to genetic variability, artificial selection, and environmental stress, with complex molecular and genetic mechanisms involved. 

Recently, a research team led by Prof. ZHAO Pengshan from the Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) identified the tricotyledony occurrence from natural populations of sand rice and isolated the mutant seedlings with over two cotyledons from the chemical mutagenesis library, to assess the evolutionary significance and genetic basis of the cotyledon number in dicotyledon species. 

This study was published in Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution on Aug. 29. 

The study revealed that spontaneous tricotyledonony occurred in different sand rice accessions, with occurrence rate ranging from 0.83 to 14.29%. 

The researchers found that the tricotyledonous seed quality of sand rice varies in different regions. Tricotyledonous plants at Duolunbei show defects in seed development, while tricotyledonous plants at Shigatse show significant increases in seed weight, suggesting that tricotyledonous plants are associated with growth phenotypic variation in different accessions. 

This result suggests that cotyledon number change could produce some correlated variation in adult phenotypes, which in turn affect the fitness of the sand rice to the external environment. 

In addition, the study implies that extreme environments and/or internal genetic variation are a pervasive conserved/converged state that influences the emergence of tricotyledonous leave in dicotyledonous plants. 

“This study helps us to deepen our understanding of the incidence and heritability of tricotyledony in sand rice,” said ZHAO. 

  

Contact: 

ZHAO Pengshan 

E-mail: zhaopengshan@lzb.ac.cn

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