Norwich, United Kingdom
November 15, 2005
Scientists at the John Innes
Centre (JIC) report today a breakthrough in understanding
how crop plants use daylength to ensure they flower at the right
time of year. In an article published in the international
journal Science*, they
describe a gene that controls how barley reacts to the length of
the day and thus controls when it flowers.
Most plants flower at a
particular time of the year and researchers have known for a
long time that plants use cues from their environment to control
when they flower. Many crops, including barley, react to the
length of the day (daylength) and use this to determine their
flowering time.
“Different varieties of barley
(and other crops) respond to daylength in different ways and
this has been used to breed varieties adapted to grow in
different farming environments” said Dr David Laurie (Project
Leader at JIC). “Our result is exciting because for the first
time we have identified the gene (called Ppd-H1)** that controls
this very important response and now understand how plants
monitor daylength. This should help breeders who are breeding
new varieties for new environments and changing agricultural
conditions – caused by global climate change.”
Some barley varieties respond
very quickly to the lengthening days in spring and so flower
early in the summer. Others respond much more slowly and flower
later. Early flowering is an advantage in places where the
summers are hot and dry, such as the Mediterranean, because the
plants can complete their life cycle before they are exposed to
the stresses of high summer. In places like England, where the
summers are cool and wet, late flowering is an advantage because
the longer growing period allows the crops to deliver higher
yields.
“Now we have identified the
gene we will be able to find out how many versions of this gene
there are in barley and which environments they match”, said Dr
Laurie. “This will give us a better picture of the history of
our crops and help us understand how crops have been bred for
different environments around the world. Our studies suggest
that the same gene may be important in wheat and rice. If this
is true, then it will prove to be a gene that has been very
influential in the process of domesticating wild plants to bring
them into agriculture.
The John Innes Centre (JIC),
Norwich, UK is an independent, world-leading research centre in
plant and microbial sciences. The JIC has over 800 staff and
students. JIC carries out high quality fundamental, strategic
and applied research to understand how plants and microbes work
at the molecular, cellular and genetic levels. The JIC also
trains scientists and students, collaborates with many other
research laboratories and communicates its science to end-users
and the general public. The JIC is grant-aided by the
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.
* The paper “The
pseudo-response regulator Ppd-H1 provides adaptation to
photoperiod in barley” is published by Science on the 11th
November 2005.
** The Ppd-H1 (Photoperiod
H-1) gene is part of a genetic pathway that controls barley’s
response to daylength. |