Characterization of pearl millet root architecture and anatomy reveals three types of lateral roots

Archive ouverte

Passot, Sixtine | Gnacko, Fatoumata | Moukouanga, Daniel | Lucas, Mikael | Guyomarc'H, Soazig | Moreno-Ortega, Beatriz | Atkinson, Jonathan A | Belko, Marème N. | Bennett, Malcolm J | Gantet, Pascal | Wells, Darren M | Guédon, Yann | Vigouroux, Yves, Y. | Verdeil, Jean-Luc | Muller, Bertrand | Laplaze, Laurent

Edité par CCSD ; Frontiers -

International audience. Pearl millet plays an important role for food security in arid regions of Africa and India. Nevertheless, it is considered an orphan crop as it lags far behind other cereals in terms of genetic improvement efforts. Breeding pearl millet varieties with improved root traits promises to deliver benefits in water and nutrient acquisition. Here, we characterize early pearl millet root system development using several different root phenotyping approaches that include rhizotrons and microCT. We report that early stage pearl millet root system development is characterized by a fast growing primary root that quickly colonizes deeper soil horizons. We also describe root anatomical studies that revealed three distinct types of lateral roots that form on both primary roots and crown roots. Finally, we detected significant variation for two root architectural traits, primary root length and lateral root density, in pearl millet inbred lines. This study provides the basis for subsequent genetic experiments to identify loci associated with interesting early root development traits in this important cereal.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

A new phenotyping pipeline reveals three types of lateral roots and a random branching pattern in two cereals

Archive ouverte | Passot, Sixtine | CCSD

International audience. Recent progress in root phenotyping has focused mainly on increasing throughput for genetic studies while identifying root developmental patterns has been comparatively underexplored. We intr...

CROWN ROOTLESS1 binds DNA with a relaxed specificity and activates OsROP and OsbHLH044 genes involved in crown root formation in rice

Archive ouverte | Gonin, Mathieu | CCSD

International audience. In cereals, the root system is mainly composed of post-embryonic shoot-borne roots, named crown roots. The CROWN ROOTLESS1 (CRL1) transcription factor, belonging to the ASYMMETRIC LEAVES2-LIK...

The roots of future rice harvests

Archive ouverte | Ahmadi, Nourollah | CCSD

International audience. Rice production faces the challenge to be enhanced by 50% by year 2030 to meet the growth of the population in rice-eating countries. Whereas yield of cereal crops tend to reach plateaus and ...

Chargement des enrichissements...