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- Identification and analysis of growth and growth heterosis candidate genes
- Research Group: Heterosis head: Prof. thomas altmann Scientists
- Analysis and prediction of performance features in crop plants
- Characterization of genes corresponding to metabolite QTL in Arabidopsis thaliana and further investigation of growth – metabolism relations
- Upgrade of Plant Phenotyping Platforms
- Project area Lipid Metabolism in Oil-storing Seeds
- Technology Platform Nucleic Acids Analyses
- Publications Peer Reviewed Papers 2012
Research Report Project area Analysis of Growth and Metabolism during Ve- getative Development central aims of the project area are the identification and charac- terisation of factors influencing vegetative growth and heterosis in relation to plant metabolism. the superior features of the Ara- bidopsis model system are used to identify at the molecular level loci causing variation in growth and metabolite contents. Growth related parameters and metabolic content were recorded in large genotyped populations of recombinant inbred lines (RiL), intro- gression lines (iL), collections of accessions, and test crosses (tcs) for QtL analyses. currently, growth (biomass) heterosis QtL are fine-mapped, and candidate genes for heterotic biomass, tyro- sine, urea, and fumarate contents are under investigation. ongoing and future analyses focus on the verification of candi- date genes and their functional analyses (qRt-PcR, Rna-Seq), which will include temporally and spatially highly resolved ex- pression and metabolome profiling for primary candidates. an important aspect is the transfer of the knowledge on heterosis and novel concepts gained in Arabidopsis to crop species such as maize and rapeseed and comparative analyses. Identification and analysis of growth and growth heterosis candidate genes F1 hybrids between accessions c24 and col-0 show strong he- terosis for early biomass accumulation due to effects on seed- ling establishment (Meyer et al. 2012). using QtL mapping ana- lyses in RiLs and iLs, the strongest QtL was fine-mapped to 14 genes at the top of chromosome iV (Meyer et al. 2010). Parental accessions c24 and col-0 were transformed with single genes or cosmids spanning the QtL region (h.-J. Jeon, R.c. Meyer, un- published results). Lines were phenotyped as homozygous t3 or segregating t2 using the automated plant phenotyping sys- Research Group: Heterosis head: Prof. thomas altmann Scientists IPK financed altschmied, Lothar, dr. borisjuk, Lioudmilla, dr. brandt, Ronny (0,50/1,00, since 01.10.2012) Fuchs, Johannes (0,50, 01.08.-31.08.2013) Jeon, hea-Jung (0,50, since 01.10.2013) Meyer, Rhonda, dr. Radchuk, Ruslana, dr. (01.04.-30.06.2012) Riewe, david, dr. Seyfarth, Monique (0,50/0,25, till 31.12.2012) Grant Positions arana ceballos, Fernando, dr. (dFG, till 14.07.2012) Fuchs, Johannes (0,50 industry, till 31.01.2013; 0,50 bMbF/ dPPn, 01.02.-31.07.2013) Gryczka, corina, dr. (bMbF, till 31.03.2012) heinzel, nicolas, dr. (industry) Junker, astrid, dr. (0,50 eu, 01.08.2012-31.10.2013; 0,50/1,00 bMbF/dPPn, since 01.11.2012) könig, christina (0,50 dFG, since 15.09.2012) Munz, eberhard (0,50 dFG, since 01.06.2012) Muraya, Moses Mahugu (bMbF) Radchuk, Volodymyr, dr. (industry, since 01.09.2013) Radchuk, Ruslana, dr. (0,50 industry, till 31.03.2012) Rolletschek, hardy, dr. (industry, till 31.01.2013; aiF/bMWi, since 01.02.2013) Rosso, Mario, dr. (bMbF, till 31.03.2013; bMbF/dPPn, since 01.04.2013) Seyfarth, Monique (0,50 Saxony-anhalt, till 30.04.2012) Shi, Rongli, dr. (0,75/1,00 dFG, till 30.09.2013; bMbF/dPPn, since 01.10.2013) tschiersch, henning, dr. (bMbF, till 30.04.2012; 1,00/0,50 indus- try, till 30.11.2012; 0,50 bMbF/dPPn, since 01.06.2013) Weigelt-Fischer, kathleen (bMbF, till 31.03.2013; bMbF/dPPn, since 01.07.2013) Visiting Scientists/Scholars ernst, Michaela, dr. (self-financed, till 31.05.2012) Jeon, hea-Jung (korean Government, till 26.09.2013) Muscolo, adele (ePPn, 15.09.-02.11.2013) Pawelkowicz, Magdalena (ePPn, 01.06.-30.06.2013) Seifert, Michael, dr. (self-financed, 01.01.-28.02.2013) Sotak, Miro (self-financed, 18.11.-14.12.2013) Goals With the major aim of identifying factors controlling plant per- formance characteristics, two complementary research areas are addressed within the group: (i) Genetic/genomic approa- Abteilung Molekulare Genetik/ Department of Molecular Genetics 92 seed morphology. these data are now used to build multi-trait QtL analyses to increase the power to detect small effect QtL (d. knoch, J. koppolu, d. Riewe, R.c. Meyer, R. Schmidt, unpub- lished results). Future plans include to map the seed lipidomic fraction of metabolites and to extent the approach to genome- wide studies using hundreds of Arabidopsis accessions. Analysis and prediction of performance features in crop plants an important aspect is the transfer of the knowledge on hetero- sis gained in Arabidopsis to crop species such as maize and rape- seed. of particular interest in this context is the prediction of heterosis using parental data: SnPs, structural genome variation (PaV/cnV), metabolite profiles, transcript profiles, and phenoty- pic measures. Furthermore, we are evaluating the potential hy- brid advantages (heterosis) under varying environmental con- ditions to improve plant performance under natural conditions. in the frame of the Gabi-eneRGY cooperation project projects (jointly with a. Melchinger, university of hohenheim; L. Willmit- zer and M. Stitt, MPi-MP Golm; J. Selbig, Potsdam university; M. ouzunova, kWS einbeck; and their co-workers) a panel of 289 diverse maize dent inbreds were genotyped using the maize 50k SnP array and were characterized for agronomic traits and metabolite profiles and a subset of 92 inbreds and testcrosses thereof (selected after initial analysis of the entire population) has been characterized for vegetative growth performance un- der controlled (glass house) conditions, for metabolite compo- sition, and for transcript profiles (M. ernst, c. Gryczka, S. Friedel, unpublished data). using field performance data of testcrosses the joint analysis revealed that the parental SnP and metabolite data contain very substantial information useful for prediction of the general combining ability of the inbreds (Riedelsheimer et al. 2012a). Furthermore, correlation of metabolite contents with expression of agronomic traits and association mapping of QtL affecting metabolite levels highlighted individual metabo- lic pathways such as lignin precursor biosynthesis to contribute to overall plant performance, e.g. dry matter yield formation (Riedelsheimer et al. 2012b). array-based comparative genomic hybridisation (acGh) analyses performed on 34 maize inbred lines revealed an extraordinary high level of copy number va- riation (cnV) or presence/absence variation (PaV) of genomic segments (M. Muraya, M. Seiffert, unpublished data). Within the PLant-kbbe cornFed cooperation projects (jointly with a. Mel- chinger, university of hohenheim; a. charcosset, inRa Moulon; d. brunel, cnG evry; c. Schön, tu München; M. ouzunova, kWS einbeck; and their co-workers) detailed genetic and phenoty- pic characterisation of diverse collections of maize inbred lines (‘flint’, ‘dent’, and ‘tropical’ panels), dh lines and testcrosses the- reof has been carried out. these and the aforementioned efforts have led to the accumulation of 50k SnP genotype data for a total of more than 1000 inbred lines and more than 2200 dh lines; the latter are arranged in a nested association mapping (naM) design (Rincent et al. 2012, bauer et al. 2013). a series of 265 maize inbred lines were phenotyped for biomass accumu- lation, water consumption and the collected data were used to determine water use efficiency (M. Muraya, unpublished results). the observed substantial genetic variation of this trait tem (Lemnatec). Leaf area was altered for two candidate genes, which are also involved in a regulatory network, indicating that the heterotic biomass (hb) QtL at the top of chromosome iV is a complex locus possibly involving more than one gene and epi- stasis with other loci (h.-J. Jeon, R.c. Meyer, a. Junker, unpub- lished results). characterization of t-dna k.o. mutants of genes in the support interval and testcrosses thereof is ongoing (k. Weigelt, d. Riewe, R.c. Meyer, unpublished data). a biomass QtL on the top of chromosome iii that could be si- mulated purely on the basis of the metabolic composition of the plants (Lisec et al. 2008) is suspected to be involved in cross talk between metabolism and growth control. to identify the causal gene(s), this bQtL was further fine-mapped in a targeted Ld mapping approach with 272 accessions. Significantly asso- ciated SnPs cluster between 1.9 and 2.4 Mb resulting in identifi- cation of nine candidate genes (M. Seyfarth, unpublished data). candidate gene t-dna k.o. mutants were phenotyped using the automated high-throughput plant phenotyping system (Lemnatec). candidates passing this test are then subjected to qRt-PcR and further phenotyping for validation (R.c. Meyer, c. klukas, d. knoch, unpublished results). Characterization of genes corresponding to metabolite QTL in Arabidopsis thaliana and further investigation of growth – metabolism relations based on previous data of metabolite (m)QtL identified through gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Gc-MS)- based metabolic profiling of RiL and iL populations (Lisec et al. 2008), 30 candidate genes were selected for an initial ana- lysis according to their proposed enzymatic role related to 15 different metabolites affected by mQtL. effects on abundance of the corresponding metabolite were observed by t-dna k.o. mutations of 5 genes that were selected for further investiga- tion using also tiLLinG mutants and dsRnai lines subjected to Gc/MS analyses (brotman et al. 2011; Riewe et al. 2012). characterisation of the tyrosine aminotransferase (tat) candi- date gene At5g53970 revealed a high impact on tyrosine to to- copherol conversion (Riewe et al. 2012). to investigate the im- portance of other members of this poorly characterised gene family, effects on metabolism are studied in 14 independent t-dna k.o. lines for the seven members of the tat gene family, in tissues in which the mutated locus has a high native expres- sion (eFP browser). analyses of polar components (tyrosine and related amino acids) indicated tat7 as the major contributor to tyrosine conversion in leaf and seed tissue. Most candidates show a significant effect on different groups of metabolites (M. heuermann, d. Riewe, unpublished results). natural genetic variation of metabolism and growth in Arabidop - sis was further studied in mature seeds of 402 RiLs using Gc- MS and photometry. 319 metabolites and protein content were quantified and data used in QtL mapping. 573 mQtL and one protein QtL explained up to 92 % of the variance of particular metabolites. Pca revealed a clustering of samples, with Pca1 mapping to the top of chromosome iV proximal to FRIGIDA, dis- tinct from the major biomass heterosis QtL located upstream. correlation/FdR analysis including morphological traits dis- played links between the metabolome, protein content and 93 has been adapted for (a) quantification of 3d lipid gradients in living seeds and fruits of diverse species (borisjuk et al., Pro- gress in Lipid Research 2013); (b) visualisation of in vivo com- partmentation of metabolism in developing seeds (Rolletschek et al., Plant cell 2011; borisjuk et al., Plant cell 2013), and (c) discovery of the breathing space in seed (Verboven et al., new Phytologist 2013). the technology was further developed to serve a noninvasive platform for high throughput imaging of sub-millimetre seeds (Fuchs et al., Plant Physiology 2013) and the nMR approach was linked with state-of-the-art mass spec- trometry (MaLdi) imaging to visualize numerous lipid species in seeds of cotton (horn et al., Plant cell 2013) and Camelina (horn et al., Plant Journal 2013). the research topic which are addressed using the established technology cover sink/source interactions (Radchuk et al., new Phytologist 2012), metabolic regulation in seeds, improvements in storage metabolism and stress resistance (oxygen deficiency, drought; Rolletschek 2012 [habilitation], kalladan et al., Molecular breeding 2012). For this purpose, the imaging technologies are combined with traditio- nal ‘omics’ analyses and metabolic modelling approaches (flux balance analysis). this integrative approach is used to study a range of crop species such as rapeseed, cotton, barley, pea, tobacco and soybean. Specific procedures, such as the nMR- based quantification of seed sizes and composition as well as the assessment of changes in o 2 and co 2 levels are advanced into multiparallel / high throughput installations within the dPPn project to enable large scale analyses. these aformen- tioned studies and research projects rely on intense collabo- ration within iPk (n. von Wirén; F. Schreiber, a. börner) as well as external collaborations (P. Jakob at Würzburg university, J. Schwender at bnL/uSa, k.d. chapman at texas university/ uSa, t. neuberger at Penn State university/uSa). and preliminary results of genome-wide association tests indi- cate the opportunity to map and identify genes affecting this agronomically important trait. Upgrade of Plant Phenotyping Platforms in the first phase of the bMbF-funded dPPn (German Plant Phe- notyping network) project, which was started in october 2012, the existing plant phenotyping platforms (Lemnatec) of iPk are upgraded in order to provide new capabilities: Laser scanner systems are integrated, which support 3d reconstructions of individual plants and stands of plants and to derive more de- tailed information on plant/stand architecture (and changes over time). new installations are being added for functional chlorophyll fluorescence in order to assess performance cha- racteristics of the plant photosystem ii (such as maximum/ effective quantum yield, maximum efficiency, photochemical and non-photochemical quenching, etc., see Fig. 29). Further major upgrades are designed and developed to assess the root system of the plants simultaneously with capturing informa- tion of the shoot. Furthermore, a network of online-sensors of environmental data (such as air temperature and humidity, irradiation, and co 2 concentration as well as soil temperature, moisture and conductivity) and of plant data (such as organ temperature, light reflectance, and growth movements) is set up into the systems to support proper analyses of plant respon- ses to environmental influences. Project area Lipid Metabolism in Oil-storing Seeds to assess the concentration and the distribution of oil, of other storage compounds and to monitor the allocation of assimi- lates in seeds, methods based on nuclear magnetic resonance (nMR) imaging, and computed tomography have been devel- oped and are intensely used. nMR is a key methodology, which Fig. 29 False color representation of Photosystem ii electron transport rates of Arabidopsis thaliana plants of parents (col-0, parent 1; c24, parent 2) and F1 hybrids (col-0 x c24; c24 x col-0) which display strong heterosis of early biomass accumulation (h. tschiersch). Abteilung Molekulare Genetik/ Department of Molecular Genetics 94 cose pyrophosphorylase, reveal coordinated adjustment of c:n metabolism mediated by an overlapping metabolic- hormonal control. Plant J. 69 (2012) 1077-1093. h orn , P.J., a.R. k orte , P.b. n eogi , e. L ove , J. F uchs , k. S trupat , L. b o - risjuk , V. S hulaev , Y.J. L ee & k.d. c hapman : Spatial mapping of lipids at cellular resolution in embryos of cotton. Plant cell 24 (2012) 622-636. h uang , X., S. e ffgen , R.c. M eyer , k. t heres & M. k oornneef : epistatic natural allelic variation reveals a function of aGaMouS- Like6 in axillary bud formation in Arabidopsis. Plant cell 24 (2012) 2364-2379. J unker , a. & h. b äumlein : Multifunctionality of the Lec1 transcrip- tion factor during plant development. Plant Signal. behav. 7 (2012) 1718-1720. J unker , a., G. M önke , t. R utten , J. k eilwagen , M. S eifert , t.M. t hi , J.P. R enou , S. b alzergue , P. V iehover , u. h ähnel , J. L udwig -M üller , L. a ltschmied , u. c onrad , b. W eisshaar & h. b äumlein : elongation- related functions of LeaFY cotYLedon1 during the devel- opment of Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant J. 71 (2012) 427-442. J unker , a., h. R ohn , t. c zauderna , c. k lukas , a. h artmann & F. S chrei - ber : creating interactive, web-based and data-enriched maps using the Systems biology Graphical notation. nature Protocols 7 (2012) 579-593. J unker , a., h. R ohn & F. S chreiber : Visual analysis of transcriptome data in the context of anatomical structures and biological networks. Front. Plant Sci. 3 (2012) 252. J unker , a., a. S orokin , t. c zauderna , F. S chreiber & a. M azein : Wiring dia- grams in biology: towards the standardized representation of biological information. trends biotechnol. 30 (2012) 555-557. k aur , h., k. S haker , n. h einzel , J. R alph , i. G alis & i.t. b aldwin : en- vironmental stresses of field growth allow cinnamyl alco- hol dehydrogenase-deficient Nicotiana attenuata plants to compensate for their structural deficiencies. Plant Physiol. 159 (2012) 1545-1570. L apin , d., R.c. M eyer , h. t akahashi , u. b echtold & G. van den a cker - veken : broad spectrum resistance of Arabidopsis c24 to dow- ny mildew is mediated by different combinations of isolate- specific loci. new Phytol. 196 (2012) 1171-1181. M eyer , R.c., h. W itucka -W all , M. b echer , a. b lacha , a. b oudichevskaia , P. d örmann , o. F iehn , S. F riedel , M. von k orff , J. L isec , M. M el - zer , d. R epsilber , R. S chmidt , M. S cholz , J. S elbig , L. W illmitzer & t. a ltmann : heterosis manifestation during early Arabidop- sis seedling development is characterized by intermediate gene expression and enhanced metabolic activity in the hybrids. Plant J. 71 (2012) 669-683. M önke , G., M. S eifert , J. k eilwagen , M. M ohr , i. G rosse , u. h ähnel , a. J un - ker , b. W eisshaar , u. c onrad , h. b äumlein & L. a ltschmied : towards the identification and regulation of the Arabidopsis thaliana abi3-regulon. nucleic acids Res. 40 (2012) 8240-8254. M uraya , M.M., h.h. G eiger , F. S agnard , L. t oure , P.c.S. t raore , S. t ogola , S. de V illiers & h.k. P arzies : adaptive values of wild × cultivated sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) hybrids in genera- tions F 1 , F 2 , and F 3 . Genet. Resour. crop evol. 59 (2012) 83-93. R adchuk , V., J. k umlehn , t. R utten , n. S reenivasulu , R. R adchuk , h. R ol - letschek , c. h errfurth , i. F eussner & L. b orisjuk : Fertility in bar- ley flowers depends on Jekyll functions in male and female sporophytes. new Phytol. 194 (2012) 142-157. Technology Platform Nucleic Acids Analyses For the hiSeq2000 sequencer (illumina) acquired and installed at the end of 2011, basic library synthesis protocols (dna and Rna paired-end) have been established in cooperation with re- search group Genome diversity (a. himmelbach) and used for in-house applications and cooperation with external partners (R. horbach, MLu halle; h. Flachowsky, Jki dresden-Pillnitz; F. ordon/d. Perovic, Jki Quedlinburg; M. Lenhard, university Pots- dam; S. Wenkel, zMbP tübingen; e. cellarova, university kosiče, Slovak Republic). these basic capabilities were extended to dna mate-pair, genotyping by sequencing, and small Rna protocols, which can now routinely be applied. together with research group bioinformatics and information technology (d. Schüler, S. Flemming, M. Lange) the laboratory information man agement system (LiMS) was adapted to store relevant in- formation of library synthesis and sequencing runs. as an application example, cdna of six different tissues of a di - pl oid, sexual Hypericum perforatum accession as well as genomic dna have been sequenced (illumina paired-end) in coopera- tion with research groups experimental taxonomy (F. blattner) and Gene Regulation (h. bäumlein) and assembled. these data were used to improve the annotation of bac insert sequences representing parts of the Hypericum perforatum apospory locus (haPPY) and corresponding sexual loci which were previously analysed (using 454 sequencing) in cooperation with research group Genome diversity (a. himmelbach). the current assemblies are available through a (password protected) bLaSt server (research group bit, Scholz). Sequence annotation of the polyketide gene family (cooperation with L. beerhues, university braunschweig) helped to identify the chS gene contributing to the haPPY locus. currently the improvement of bac contigs in the haPPY locus is under way using mate-pair sequences. Publications Peer Reviewed Papers 2012 a ndorf , S., R.c. M eyer , J. S elbig , t. a ltmann & d. R epsilber : integra tion of a systems biological network analysis and QtL results for biomass heterosis in Arabidopsis thaliana. PLoS one 7 (2012) e49951. b oggetti , b., J. J asik , M. t akamiya , u. S trähle , a.M. R eugels & J.a. c am - pos -o rtega : nbP, a zebrafish homolog of human kank3, is a novel numb interactor essential for epidermal integrity and neurulation. dev. biol. 365 (2012) 164-174. b orisjuk , L., h. R olletschek & t. n euberger : Surveying the plant’s world by magnetic resonance imaging. Plant J. 70 (2012) 129-146. b urkart -W aco , d., c. J osefsson , b.R. d ilkes , n. k ozloff , o. t örjek , R. M eyer , t. a ltmann & L. c omai : hybrid incompatibility in Ara- bidopsis is determined by a multi-locus genetic network. Plant Physiol. 158 (2012) 801-812. F aix , b., V. R adchuk , a. n erlich , c. h ümmer , R. R adchuk , R.J. n eil e mery , h. k eller , k.P. G ötz , W. W eschke , P. G eigenberger & h. W eber : bar- ley grains, deficient in cytosolic small subunit of adP-glu- 95 a. c harcosset , o.c. M artin & c.c. S chön : intraspecific variation of recombination rate in maize. Genome biol. 14 (2013) R103. b orisjuk , L., t. n euberger , J. S chwender , n. h einzel , S. S underhaus , J. F uchs , J.o. h ay , h. t schiersch , h.P. b raun , P. d enolf , b. L ambert , P.M. J akob & h. R olletschek : Seed architecture shapes embryo metabolism in oilseed rape. Plant cell 25 (2013) 1625-1640. b orisjuk , L., h. R olletschek & t. n euberger : nuclear magnetic reso- nance imaging of lipid in living plants. Prog. Lipid Res. 52 (2013) 465-487. F uchs , J., t. n euberger , h. R olletschek , S. S chiebold , t.h. n guyen , n. b orisjuk , G. M elkus , a. b örner , P. J akob & L. b orisjuk : a non-in- vasive platform for imaging and quantifying oil storage in sub-millimetre tobacco seed [W][oa] . Plant Physiol. 161 (2013) 583-593. G rafahrend -b elau , e., a. J unker , a. e schenröder , J. M üller , F. S chreiber & b.h. J unker : Multiscale metabolic modeling: dynamic flux balance analysis on a whole plant scale. Plant Physiol. 163 (2013) 637-647. h auptmann , V., n. W eichert , M. M enzel , d. k noch , n. P aege , J. S cheller , u. S pohn , u. c onrad & M. G ils : native-sized spider silk prote- ins synthesized in planta via intein-based multimerization. transgenic Res. 22 (2013) 369-377. h orn , P.J., J.e. S ilva , d. a nderson , J. F uchs , L. b orisjuk , t.J. n azarenus , V. S hulaev , e.b. c ahoon & k.d. c hapman : imaging heterogenei- ty of membrane and storage lipids in transgenic Cameli- na sativa seeds with altered fatty acid profiles. Plant J. 76 (2013) 138-150. J ásik , J., b. b oggetti , F. b aluška , d. V olkmann , t. G ensch , t. R utten , t. a ltmann & e. S chmelzer : Pin2 turnover in Arabidopsis root epidermal cells explored by the photoconvertible protein dendra2. PLoS one 8 (2013) e61403. k alladan , R., S. W orch , h. R olletschek , V.t. h arshavardhan , L. k untze , c. S eiler , n. S reenivasulu & M.S. R öder : identification of quan- titative trait loci contributing to yield and seed quality pa- rameters under terminal drought in barley advanced back- cross lines. Mol. breed. 32 (2013) 71-99. k empe , k., M. R ubtsova , d. R iewe & M. G ils : the production of male-sterile wheat plants through split barnase expression is promoted by the insertion of introns and flexible peptide linkers. transgenic Res. 22 (2013) 1089-1105. k im , Y.M., n. h einzel , J.o. G iese , J. k oeber , M. M elzer , t. R utten , n. von W irén , u. S onnewald & M.R. h ajirezaei : a dual role of tobacco hexokinase 1 in primary metabolism and sugar sensing. Plant cell environ. 36 (2013) 1311-1327. V erboven , P., e. h erremans , L. b orisjuk , L. h elfen , Q.t. h o , h. t schiersch , J. F uchs , b.M. n icolai & h. R olletschek : Void space inside the developing seed of Brassica napus and the modelling of its function. new Phytol. 199 (2013) 936-947. Download 0.66 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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