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Constitutive down‐regulation of liguleless alleles in sorghum drives increased productivity and water use efficiency

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

E-pub ahead of print
  • Nikhil Jaikumar
  • Truyen Quach
  • Zhengxiang Ge
  • Natalya Nersesian
  • Shirley J. Sato
  • Scott M. McCoy
  • Ming Guo
  • Andrew D.B. Leakey
  • Stephen P. Long
  • Tom Elmo Clemente
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>1/06/2025
<mark>Journal</mark>Plant Biotechnology Journal
Publication StatusE-pub ahead of print
Early online date1/06/25
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Summary: Plant architecture influences the microenvironment throughout the canopy layer. Plants with a more erect leaf architecture allow for an increase in planting densities and allow more light to reach lower canopy leaves. This is predicted to increase crop carbon assimilation. Frictional resistance to wind reduces air movement in the lower canopy, resulting in higher humidity. By increasing the proportion of canopy photosynthesis in the more humid lower canopy, gains in the efficiency of water use might be expected, although this may be slightly offset by the more open erectophile form canopy. An anatomical feature in members of the Poaceae family that impacts leaf angle is the articulated junction of the sheath and blade, which also bares the ligule and auricles. Mutants, which lack ligules and auricles, show no articulation at this junction, resulting in leaves that are near vertical. In maize, these phenotypes termed liguleless result from null mutations of genes: ZmLG1 (Zm00001eb432520) and ZmLG2 (Zm00001eb147220). In sorghum, SbiRTx430.06G264300 (SbLG1) and SbiRTx430.03G392300 (SbLG2) are annotated as the respective maize homologues. A hair‐pin element designed to down‐regulate both SbLG1 and SbLG2 was introduced into the grain sorghum genotype RTx430. Derived transgenic events harbouring the hair‐pin failed to develop ligules and displayed reduced leaf angles to the vertical, but less vertical than in null mutations. Under field settings, plots sown with these sorghum events having an erect architecture phenotype displayed an increase in photosynthesis in lower canopy levels, which led to increases in above‐ground biomass and seed yield, without an increase in water use.