A natural variant of NAL1, selected in high-yield rice breeding programs, pleiotropically increases photosynthesis rate

Toshiyuki Takai(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Shunsuke Adachi(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Fumio Taguchi‐Shiobara(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Yumiko Sanoh-Arai(Institute of Crop Science), Norio Iwasawa(Institute of Crop Science), Satoshi Yoshinaga(Institute of Crop Science), Sakiko Hirose(Institute of Crop Science), Yojiro Taniguchi(Institute of Crop Science), Utako Yamanouchi(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Jianzhong Wu(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Takashi Matsumoto(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Kazuhiko Sugimoto(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Katsuhiko Kondo(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Takashi Ikka(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Tsuyu Ando, Izumi Kono, Sachie Ito, Ayahiko Shomura, Taiichiro Ookawa(Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology), Tadashi Hirasawa(Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology), Masahiro Yano(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Motohiko Kondo(Institute of Crop Science), Toshio Yamamoto(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences)
Scientific Reports
August 29, 2013
Cited by 228Open Access
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Abstract

Improvement of leaf photosynthesis is an important strategy for greater crop productivity. Here we show that the quantitative trait locus GPS (GREEN FOR PHOTOSYNTHESIS) in rice (Oryza sativa L.) controls photosynthesis rate by regulating carboxylation efficiency. Map-based cloning revealed that GPS is identical to NAL1 (NARROW LEAF1), a gene previously reported to control lateral leaf growth. The high-photosynthesis allele of GPS was found to be a partial loss-of-function allele of NAL1. This allele increased mesophyll cell number between vascular bundles, which led to thickened leaves, and it pleiotropically enhanced photosynthesis rate without the detrimental side effects observed in previously identified nal1 mutants, such as dwarf plant stature. Furthermore, pedigree analysis suggested that rice breeders have repeatedly selected the high-photosynthesis allele in high-yield breeding programs. The identification and utilization of NAL1 (GPS) can enhance future high-yield breeding and provides a new strategy for increasing rice productivity.


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