Cargando…

Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content

Some Swedish spring wheat varieties have recently been shown to carry a rare wildtype (wt) allele of the gene NAM-B1, known to affect leaf senescence and nutrient retranslocation to the grain. The wt allele is believed to increase grain protein concentration and has attracted interest from breeders...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Asplund, Linnéa, Bergkvist, Göran, Leino, Matti W., Westerbergh, Anna, Weih, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059704
_version_ 1782263891395346432
author Asplund, Linnéa
Bergkvist, Göran
Leino, Matti W.
Westerbergh, Anna
Weih, Martin
author_facet Asplund, Linnéa
Bergkvist, Göran
Leino, Matti W.
Westerbergh, Anna
Weih, Martin
author_sort Asplund, Linnéa
collection PubMed
description Some Swedish spring wheat varieties have recently been shown to carry a rare wildtype (wt) allele of the gene NAM-B1, known to affect leaf senescence and nutrient retranslocation to the grain. The wt allele is believed to increase grain protein concentration and has attracted interest from breeders since it could contribute to higher grain quality and more nitrogen-efficient varieties. This study investigated whether Swedish varieties with the wt allele differ from varieties with one of the more common, non-functional alleles in order to examine the effect of the gene in a wide genetic background, and possibly explain why the allele has been retained in Swedish varieties. Forty varieties of spring wheat differing in NAM-B1 allele type were cultivated under controlled conditions. Senescence was monitored and grains were harvested and analyzed for mineral nutrient concentration. Varieties with the wt allele reached anthesis earlier and completed senescence faster than varieties with the non-functional allele. The wt varieties also had more ears, lighter grains and higher yields of P and K. Contrary to previous information on effects of the wt allele, our wt varieties did not have increased grain N concentration or grain N yield. In addition, temporal studies showed that straw length has decreased but grain N yield has remained unaffected over a century of Swedish spring wheat breeding. The faster development of wt varieties supports the hypothesis of NAM-B1 being preserved in Fennoscandia, with its short growing season, because of accelerated development conferred by the NAM-B1 wt allele. Although the possible effects of other gene actions were impossible to distinguish, the genetic resource of Fennoscandian spring wheats with the wt NAM-B1 allele is interesting to investigate further for breeding purposes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3605437
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36054372013-04-03 Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content Asplund, Linnéa Bergkvist, Göran Leino, Matti W. Westerbergh, Anna Weih, Martin PLoS One Research Article Some Swedish spring wheat varieties have recently been shown to carry a rare wildtype (wt) allele of the gene NAM-B1, known to affect leaf senescence and nutrient retranslocation to the grain. The wt allele is believed to increase grain protein concentration and has attracted interest from breeders since it could contribute to higher grain quality and more nitrogen-efficient varieties. This study investigated whether Swedish varieties with the wt allele differ from varieties with one of the more common, non-functional alleles in order to examine the effect of the gene in a wide genetic background, and possibly explain why the allele has been retained in Swedish varieties. Forty varieties of spring wheat differing in NAM-B1 allele type were cultivated under controlled conditions. Senescence was monitored and grains were harvested and analyzed for mineral nutrient concentration. Varieties with the wt allele reached anthesis earlier and completed senescence faster than varieties with the non-functional allele. The wt varieties also had more ears, lighter grains and higher yields of P and K. Contrary to previous information on effects of the wt allele, our wt varieties did not have increased grain N concentration or grain N yield. In addition, temporal studies showed that straw length has decreased but grain N yield has remained unaffected over a century of Swedish spring wheat breeding. The faster development of wt varieties supports the hypothesis of NAM-B1 being preserved in Fennoscandia, with its short growing season, because of accelerated development conferred by the NAM-B1 wt allele. Although the possible effects of other gene actions were impossible to distinguish, the genetic resource of Fennoscandian spring wheats with the wt NAM-B1 allele is interesting to investigate further for breeding purposes. Public Library of Science 2013-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3605437/ /pubmed/23555754 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059704 Text en © 2013 Asplund et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Asplund, Linnéa
Bergkvist, Göran
Leino, Matti W.
Westerbergh, Anna
Weih, Martin
Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title_full Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title_fullStr Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title_full_unstemmed Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title_short Swedish Spring Wheat Varieties with the Rare High Grain Protein Allele of NAM-B1 Differ in Leaf Senescence and Grain Mineral Content
title_sort swedish spring wheat varieties with the rare high grain protein allele of nam-b1 differ in leaf senescence and grain mineral content
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059704
work_keys_str_mv AT asplundlinnea swedishspringwheatvarietieswiththerarehighgrainproteinalleleofnamb1differinleafsenescenceandgrainmineralcontent
AT bergkvistgoran swedishspringwheatvarietieswiththerarehighgrainproteinalleleofnamb1differinleafsenescenceandgrainmineralcontent
AT leinomattiw swedishspringwheatvarietieswiththerarehighgrainproteinalleleofnamb1differinleafsenescenceandgrainmineralcontent
AT westerberghanna swedishspringwheatvarietieswiththerarehighgrainproteinalleleofnamb1differinleafsenescenceandgrainmineralcontent
AT weihmartin swedishspringwheatvarietieswiththerarehighgrainproteinalleleofnamb1differinleafsenescenceandgrainmineralcontent