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GrainGenes Reference Report: NAT-400-256

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Reference
NAT-400-256
Title
'Green revolution' genes encode mutant gibberellin response modulators.
Journal
Nature
Year
1999
Volume
400
Pages
256-261
Author
Peng JR
[ Show all 15 ]
Abstract
World wheat grain yields increased substantially in the 1960s and 1970s because farmers rapidly adopted the new varieties and cultivation methods of the so-called 'green revolution'. The new varieties are shorter, increase grain yield at the expense of straw biomass, and are more resistant to damage by wind and rain. These wheats are short because they respond abnormally to the plant growth hormone gibberellin. This reduced response to gibberellin is conferred by mutant dwarfing alleles at one of two Reduced height-1 (Rht-B1 and Rht-D1) loci. Here we show that Rht-B1/Rht-D1 and maize dwarf-8 (d8) are orthologues of the Arabidopsis Gibberellin Insensitive (GAI) gene. These genes encode proteins that resemble nuclear transcription factors and contain an SH2-like domain, indicating that phosphotyrosine may participate in gibberellin signalling. Six different orthologous dwarfing mutant alleles encode proteins that are altered in a conserved amino-terminal gibberellin signalling domain. Transgenic rice plants containing a mutant GAI allele give reduced responses to gibberellin and are dwarfed, indicating that mutant GAI orthologues could be used to increase yield in a wide range of crop species.
External Databases
Pubmed: 10421366
DOI: 10.1038/22307
Allele
Rht-B1g (Triticum)
Gene
Rht-B1 (Triticum)
Rht-1
Rht1 (Triticum)
Rht-A1a (Triticum)
Rht-D1 (Triticum)
Keyword
[ Hide all but 1 of 29 ]
alleles
amino acid sequence
arabidopsis thaliana
biomass
chromosome mapping
corn
cultivation
domain
expressed sequence tags
gene
gibberellins
grain yield
growth
growth and development
loci
maize
methods
molecular sequence data
mutant
mutation
pharmacology
physiology
resistant
rice
rice plants
straw
transcription
transgenic
yield

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