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Major flowering time genes of barley: allelic diversity, effects, and comparison with wheat
Monday, 2021/07/12 | 08:26:17

Miriam Fernández-CallejaAna M. Casas & Ernesto Igartua

Theoretical and Applied Genetics July 2021; vol. 134:1867–1897

Key message

This review summarizes the allelic series, effects, interactions between genes and with the environment, for the major flowering time genes that drive phenological adaptation of barley.

Abstract

The optimization of phenology is a major goal of plant breeding addressing the production of high-yielding varieties adapted to changing climatic conditions. Flowering time in cereals is regulated by genetic networks that respond predominately to day length and temperature. Allelic diversity at these genes is at the basis of barley wide adaptation. Detailed knowledge of their effects, and genetic and environmental interactions will facilitate plant breeders manipulating flowering time in cereal germplasm enhancement, by exploiting appropriate gene combinations. This review describes a catalogue of alleles found in QTL studies by barley geneticists, corresponding to the genetic diversity at major flowering time genes, the main drivers of barley phenological adaptation: VRN-H1 (HvBM5A), VRN-H2 (HvZCCTa-c), VRN-H3 (HvFT1), PPD-H1 (HvPRR37), PPD-H2 (HvFT3), and eam6/eps2 (HvCEN). For each gene, allelic series, size and direction of QTL effects, interactions between genes and with the environment are presented. Pleiotropic effects on agronomically important traits such as grain yield are also discussed. The review includes brief comments on additional genes with large effects on phenology that became relevant in modern barley breeding. The parallelisms between flowering time allelic variation between the two most cultivated Triticeae species (barley and wheat) are also outlined. This work is mostly based on previously published data, although we added some new data and hypothesis supported by a number of studies. This review shows the wide variety of allelic effects that provide enormous plasticity in barley flowering behavior, which opens new avenues to breeders for fine-tuning phenology of the barley crop.

 

See: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00122-021-03824-z

 

Figure 1: Flowering time control in barley: main genes, environmental cues and regulatory pathways. Reproductive transition in barley is regulated by genetic networks that respond to extended periods of low temperature (vernalization, blue frame) and day length (photoperiod, orange frame). Genes depicted in blue promote flowering, whereas genes depicted in red act as repressors. Blue and green arrows indicate induction. Red lines with blunt ends indicate repression. Antagonistic relationships between genes reported in the literature are represented as dashed red lines. PPD-H2 connection with flowering is represented as a dashed blue line because it induces spikelet initiation but not floral development (Mulki et al. 2018). LD long days, SD short days.

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