Functional Plant Biology
Volume 48 Number 8 2021
FP20381Advances in the role of auxin for transcriptional regulation of lignin biosynthesis
Auxin regulates lignin biosynthesis is important research area of plant study. In this study, we summarised the research advances of the role of auxin for transcriptional regulation of lignin biosynthesis. This review provides research directions for future work.
Oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) genotypes require higher amounts of nitrogen (N), but surplus N use at plant maturity results in a greater risk of environmental pollution. The study focussed on the growth attributes of different N utilisation efficiency (NUtE) genotypes, and found flowering is the critical growth stage to distinguish high and low N utilisation efficiency oilseed rape genotypes. Plant breeders could focus their selection on root and shoot phenotypic traits at flowering stage to improve NUE of oilseed rape genotypes.
FP20263 Abstract | FP20263 Full Text | FP20263PDF (1.2 MB) | FP20263Supplementary Material (297 KB) Open Access Article
Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) imagery has been using for ground coverage (GC) estimation, which is used as a cultivar selection criterion in crop breeding. The estimation accuracy is constrained by coarse spatial resolutions of UAV imagery captured at high flight altitudes. This study proposed a two-step machine learning method to improve the estimation accuracy from coarse-resolution imagery. The method can be potentially applied in crop breeding to accurately estimate GC from UAV imagery captured at high altitudes and thus to improve the flight coverage per unit of UAV flight time with the limited battery life and operation time.
FP20309 Abstract | FP20309 Full Text | FP20309PDF (5.2 MB) | FP20309Supplementary Material (239 KB) Open Access Article
FP19250Barley plants carrying the altered function Sln1d allele display modified responses to low phosphorus supply: implications for phosphorus utilisation efficiency
Sustainable crop production demands a better understanding of nutrient utilisation efficiency, including the genetic factors involved in its control. The role of a barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) gene related with those of the Green Revolution, Sln1, on phosphorus utilisation efficiency was explored in this study, unveiling that a variant of Sln1 determined major differences in plant acclimation to low phosphorus supply. Our results reveal the need to perform multiple analyses to fully understand the information provided by utilisation efficiency indicators.
FP21047Overexpression of AGAMOUS-like gene PfAG5 promotes early flowering in Polypogon fugax
In this study, transcriptome sequencing, transgenic function verification of Arabidopsis thaliana L., and protein interaction verification were used to clarify the early flowering regulation function of PfAG5 gene in Polypogon fugax Nees ex Steud. herbicide-resistant population. The results of this study are helpful to understand the mechanism of early flowering in herbicide-resistant weeds.
FP21047 Abstract | FP21047 Full Text | FP21047PDF (927 KB) | FP21047Supplementary Material (1.1 MB) Open Access Article
Expression of TaTAR2-B3, TaYUC9-1 and TaYUC10 coincides with increasing IAA content, grain weight and starch content from 5 to 15 days after anthesis, highlighting the importance of the TAR/YUCCA pathway for grain filling in wheat (Triticum aestivum L).
FP20365Photosynthesis, chlorophyll fluorescence and photochemical reflectance index in photoinhibited leaves
Solar-induced chlorophyll (chl) fluorescence (SIF) has been shown to be positively correlated with vegetation photosynthesis, suggesting that it is a useful index for remote sensing of photosynthetic activities. However, the present study demonstrates that the relationship between photosynthesis and chl fluorescence is different between photoinhibited and healthy leaves. A model of energy allocation using chl fluorescence and photochemical reflectance index (PRI) can predict photochemical efficiency in photoinhibited leaves.
The responses of plants to recurrent stress may differ from their responses to a single instance of stress, we investigated this with clonal plants. Results showed that the memory exhibited by recurrently stressed parents is maintained for a long time, but that of singly stressed parents is only short-term. Moreover, the one-time stress is a eustress that increased biomass, but recurring stress is a distress that reduced biomass. Our findings will be beneficial to understand the environmental adaptability of plants.
FP20303 Abstract | FP20303 Full Text | FP20303PDF (523 KB) Open Access Article