Genome-wide associated study identifies NAC42-activated nitrate transporter conferring high nitrogen use efficiency in rice

Over-application of nitrogen fertilizer in fields has had a negative impact on both environment and human health. Domesticated rice varieties with high nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) reduce fertilizer for sustainable agriculture. Here, we perform genome-wide association analysis of a diverse rice pop...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-11, Vol.10 (1), p.5279-11, Article 5279
Hauptverfasser: Tang, Weijie, Ye, Jian, Yao, Xiangmei, Zhao, Pingzhi, Xuan, Wei, Tian, Yunlu, Zhang, Yuanyan, Xu, Shuang, An, Hongzhou, Chen, Gaoming, Yu, Jun, Wu, Wei, Ge, Yuwei, Liu, Xiaolan, Li, Jin, Zhang, Hanzhi, Zhao, Yaqin, Yang, Bing, Jiang, Xingzhou, Peng, Chao, Zhou, Cong, Terzaghi, William, Wang, Chunming, Wan, Jianmin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Over-application of nitrogen fertilizer in fields has had a negative impact on both environment and human health. Domesticated rice varieties with high nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) reduce fertilizer for sustainable agriculture. Here, we perform genome-wide association analysis of a diverse rice population displaying extreme nitrogen-related phenotypes over three successive years in the field, and identify an elite haplotype of nitrate transporter OsNPF6.1 HapB that enhances nitrate uptake and confers high NUE by increasing yield under low nitrogen supply. OsNPF6.1 HapB differs in both the protein and promoter element with natural variations, which are differentially trans-activated by OsNAC42, a NUE-related transcription factor. The rare natural allele OsNPF6.1 HapB , derived from variation in wild rice and selected for enhancing both NUE and yield, has been lost in 90.3% of rice varieties due to the increased application of fertilizer. Our discovery highlights this NAC42-NPF6.1 signaling cascade as a strategy for high NUE and yield breeding in rice. Improving crop nitrogen use efficiency can facilitate sustainable production, however, the genetic mechanisms have not been fully revealed. Here, the authors discover the NAC42-NPF6.1 signaling cascade mainly derives from  indica and wild rice and demonstrate the potential of using the allele for cultivar improvement.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-13187-1