News / Science News

    Researchers uncover genetic instructions for cells that help crops tolerate drought and flooding

    A study revealed how plants add new cell layers that help them resist climate stressors like drought or flooding. The research focuses on corn -- a critically important crop around the world -- to create a cell-by-cell map of the plant’s root system, which mediates drought stress and absorbs nutrients and fertilizer from the soil.



    A specialized gene generates multiple layers of cortex that have roles in drought and flooding stress. Photo: Carlos Ortiz-Ramírez


    "We discovered how corn expands its cortex tissue, which makes up much of the crop’s root system,” said Kenneth Birnbaum of New York University, senior author of a paper that appears in the journal Science. “Adding layers to the cortex tissue is a key evolutionary feature that generates ways for plants to tolerate drought and flooding and improve nutrient uptake.”

    The traits are “critical targets to allow plants to withstand global warming and reduce the carbon footprint of crops," added Birnbaum, who led the project in collaboration with researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and the University of Pennsylvania.

    To create a single-cell map of the corn root, the researchers first broke apart the root using cell-wall digesting enzymes to generate single, free-floating cells. New approaches then allowed them to analyze the mRNA content of individual cells, distinguishing molecular features that lead to specific types of specialized cells.

    They next mapped the cells back to their location in the corn root, akin to assembling a 10,000-piece jigsaw puzzle without a guide. To solve the puzzle, the researchers used fluorescent dyes that penetrated root tissues at variable depths to label and isolate different layers, like separating the layers of an onion, giving them gene landmarks. (National Science Foundation)

    JANUARY 9, 2022



    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

    Planting trees and suppressing wildfires do not necessarily maximise the carbon storage of natural ecosystems.
    Results could change the way scientists think about potential damage from earthquakes.
    Simple process uses noscapine to produce setigerumine I.
    Wheat and rice farming on the vast Indo-Gangetic plains, affected by excessive salts in the soil, can be cost-effectively improved by treatment with gypsum (...)
    Scientists have found a novel way to combine two species of grass-like plant including banana, rice and wheat (...)
    Engineers create easy-to-use and effective underwater adhesive.

    © 1991-2023 The Titi Tudorancea Bulletin | Titi Tudorancea® is a Registered Trademark | Terms of use and privacy policy
    Contact