Natural allelic variation in a modulator of auxin homeostasis improves grain yield and nitrogen use efficiency in rice

Siyu Zhang(Nanjing Agricultural University), Limei Zhu(Nanjing Agricultural University), Chengbo Shen(Nanjing Agricultural University), Zhe Ji(University of Oxford), Haipeng Zhang(Nanjing Agricultural University), Tao Zhang(University of California San Diego), Yu Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianping Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ning Yang(Huazhong Agricultural University), Yubing He(Nanjing Agricultural University), Yanan Tian(Nanjing Agricultural University), Kun Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Juyou Wu(Nanjing Agricultural University), Nicholas P. Harberd(University of Oxford), Yunde Zhao(University of California San Diego), Xiangdong Fu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shaokui Wang(South China Agricultural University), Shan Li(Nanjing Agricultural University)
The Plant Cell
December 29, 2020
Cited by 117Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The external application of nitrogen (N) fertilizers is an important practice for increasing crop production. However, the excessive use of fertilizers significantly increases production costs and causes environmental problems, making the improvement of crop N-use efficiency (NUE) crucial for sustainable agriculture in the future. Here we show that the rice (Oryza sativa) NUE quantitative trait locus DULL NITROGEN RESPONSE1 (qDNR1), which is involved in auxin homeostasis, reflects the differences in nitrate (NO3-) uptake, N assimilation, and yield enhancement between indica and japonica rice varieties. Rice plants carrying the DNR1indica allele exhibit reduced N-responsive transcription and protein abundance of DNR1. This, in turn, promotes auxin biosynthesis, thereby inducing AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR-mediated activation of NO3- transporter and N-metabolism genes, resulting in improved NUE and grain yield. We also show that a loss-of-function mutation at the DNR1 locus is associated with increased N uptake and assimilation, resulting in improved rice yield under moderate levels of N fertilizer input. Therefore, modulating the DNR1-mediated auxin response represents a promising strategy for achieving environmentally sustainable improvements in rice yield.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis