AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the genetic basis of the six-rowed spike phenotype in barley, focusing on the vrs1.a4 allele, which has the same coding sequence as the Vrs1.b4 allele found in two-rowed barley.
  • - Genetic analyses demonstrate that a single nuclear gene governs the change in row type between two-rowed and six-rowed barley, with Vrs1 identified as the likely candidate gene located on chromosome 2H.
  • - Further investigation shows that reduced expression of vrs1.a4 leads to the six-rowed spike, attributed to a 'TA' dinucleotide deletion in the regulatory region, although more research is needed to confirm the connection between this deletion and decreased Vrs1 expression.

Article Abstract

Decisive role of reduced vrs1 transcript abundance in six-rowed spike of barley carrying vrs1.a4 was genetically proved and its potential causes were preliminarily analyzed. Six-rowed spike 1 (vrs1) is the major determinant of the six-rowed spike phenotype of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Alleles of Vrs1 have been extensively investigated. Allele vrs1.a4 in six-rowed barley is unique in that it has the same coding sequence as Vrs1.b4 in two-rowed barley. The determinant of row-type in vrs1.a4 carriers has not been experimentally identified. Here, we identified Vrs1.b4 in two-rowed accessions and vrs1.a4 in six-rowed accessions from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau at high frequency. Genetic analyses revealed a single nuclear gene accounting for row-type alteration in these accessions. Physical mapping identified a 0.08-cM (~ 554-kb) target interval on chromosome 2H, wherein Vrs1 was the most likely candidate gene. Further analysis of Vrs1 expression in offspring of the mapping populations or different Vrs1.b4 and vrs1.a4 lines confirmed that downregulated expression of vrs1.a4 causes six-rowed spike. Regulatory sequence analysis found a single 'TA' dinucleotide deletion in vrs1.a4 carriers within a 'TA' tandem-repeat-enriched region ~ 1 kb upstream of the coding region. DNA methylation levels did not correspond to the expression difference and therefore did not affect Vrs1 expression. More evidence is needed to verify the causal link between the 'TA' deletion and the downregulated Vrs1 expression and hence the six-rowed spike phenotype.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00122-021-03887-yDOI Listing

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