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      The role of genetics in mainstreaming the production of new and orphan crops to diversify food systems and support human nutrition

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          Control of root system architecture by DEEPER ROOTING 1 increases rice yield under drought conditions.

          The genetic improvement of drought resistance is essential for stable and adequate crop production in drought-prone areas. Here we demonstrate that alteration of root system architecture improves drought avoidance through the cloning and characterization of DEEPER ROOTING 1 (DRO1), a rice quantitative trait locus controlling root growth angle. DRO1 is negatively regulated by auxin and is involved in cell elongation in the root tip that causes asymmetric root growth and downward bending of the root in response to gravity. Higher expression of DRO1 increases the root growth angle, whereby roots grow in a more downward direction. Introducing DRO1 into a shallow-rooting rice cultivar by backcrossing enabled the resulting line to avoid drought by increasing deep rooting, which maintained high yield performance under drought conditions relative to the recipient cultivar. Our experiments suggest that control of root system architecture will contribute to drought avoidance in crops.
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            Evolution of crop species: genetics of domestication and diversification.

            Domestication is a good model for the study of evolutionary processes because of the recent evolution of crop species (<12,000 years ago), the key role of selection in their origins, and good archaeological and historical data on their spread and diversification. Recent studies, such as quantitative trait locus mapping, genome-wide association studies and whole-genome resequencing studies, have identified genes that are associated with the initial domestication and subsequent diversification of crops. Together, these studies reveal the functions of genes that are involved in the evolution of crops that are under domestication, the types of mutations that occur during this process and the parallelism of mutations that occur in the same pathways and proteins, as well as the selective forces that are acting on these mutations and that are associated with geographical adaptation of crop species.
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              fw2.2: a quantitative trait locus key to the evolution of tomato fruit size.

              Domestication of many plants has correlated with dramatic increases in fruit size. In tomato, one quantitative trait locus (QTL), fw2.2, was responsible for a large step in this process. When transformed into large-fruited cultivars, a cosmid derived from the fw2.2 region of a small-fruited wild species reduced fruit size by the predicted amount and had the gene action expected for fw2.2. The cause of the QTL effect is a single gene, ORFX, that is expressed early in floral development, controls carpel cell number, and has a sequence suggesting structural similarity to the human oncogene c-H-ras p21. Alterations in fruit size, imparted by fw2.2 alleles, are most likely due to changes in regulation rather than in the sequence and structure of the encoded protein.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                New Phytologist
                New Phytol
                Wiley
                0028-646X
                1469-8137
                June 05 2019
                October 2019
                June 28 2019
                October 2019
                : 224
                : 1
                : 37-54
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) Kings Buildings West Mains Road Edinburgh EH9 3JG UK
                [2 ]World Agroforestry (ICRAF) Headquarters, PO Box 30677 Nairobi Kenya
                [3 ]The Roslin Institute Easter Bush Campus University of Edinburgh Midlothian EH25 9RG UK
                [4 ]University of New Hampshire Durham NH, 03824 USA
                Article
                10.1111/nph.15895
                31063598
                46b21d4b-7bc0-4067-aa6e-708c06cbf09b
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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