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Background: Seed shattering, or shedding, is an important fitness trait for wild and weedy grasses. U.S. weedy rice (Oryza sativa) is a highly shattering weed, thought to have evolved from non-shattering cultivated ancestors. All U.S. weedy rice individuals examined to date contain a mutation in the sh4 locus associated with loss of shattering during rice domestication. Weedy individuals also share the shattering trait with wild rice, but not the ancestral shattering mutation at sh4; thus, how weedy rice reacquired the shattering phenotype is unknown. To establish the morphological basis of the parallel evolution of seed shattering in weedy rice and wild, we examined the abscission layer at the flower-pedicel junction in weedy individuals in comparison with wild and cultivated relatives.
Results: Consistent with previous work, shattering wild rice individuals possess clear, defined abscission layers at flowering, whereas non-shattering cultivated rice individuals do not. Shattering weedy rice from two separately evolved populations in the U.S. (SH and BHA) show patterns of abscission layer formation and degradation distinct from wild rice. Prior to flowering, the abscission layer has formed in all weedy individuals and by flowering it is already degrading. In contrast, wild O. rufipogon abscission layers have been shown not to degrade until after flowering has occurred.
Conclusions: Seed shattering in weedy rice involves the formation and degradation of an abscission layer in the flower-pedicel junction, as in wild Oryza, but is a developmentally different process from shattering in wild rice. Weedy rice abscission layers appear to break down earlier than wild abscission layers. The timing of weedy abscission layer degradation suggests that unidentified regulatory genes may play a critical role in the reacquisition of shattering in weedy rice, and sheds light on the morphological basis of parallel evolution for shattering in weedy and wild rice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-11-14 | DOI Listing |
Front Plant Sci
July 2025
Weed Research Laboratory, College of Life Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, China.
Introduction: Bidirectional gene flow via pollen between transgenic rice and weedy rice could occur in natural fields. Gene flow from transgenic rice to weedy rice has been confirmed in many studies, and thus results showed that F hybrids could persist in natural agroecosystems due to their unimpaired reproductive ability. However, the reverse gene flow from weedy rice to transgenic rice is rarely reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFG3 (Bethesda)
September 2025
Agrinomy, Horticulture & Plant Science Department, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD 57007, United States.
Seeds are coated with pigments presumably to promote plant adaptation. To understand the adaptive mechanisms of seed pigment traits, allelic variants of the red (Rc/rc) and purple (Pb/pb) pericarp color genes were assembled into the same genetic background to identify the trait development patterns and pleiotropies of the loci on seed flavonoids, dormancy, and germination in rice (Oryza sativa). Nonallelic recombination and epistasis of the loci dictated 4 patterns of the trait development from 5 to 40 d post-anthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPest Manag Sci
July 2025
Eco-Environmental Protection Research Institute, Shanghai Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Shanghai, China.
Background: Weedy rice (Oryza sativa f. spontanea) poses considerable challenges to rice production. Benzobicyclon, a 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) inhibitor, has demonstrated potential for controlling weedy rice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
March 2025
Institute of Rice Research, Lianyungang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Lianyungang, China.
Introduction: Grain volume is a key agronomic trait of rice. It is coordinately determined by grain length, width, thickness, and roundness, which influences the rice yield and quality, yet the molecular mechanism is still not fully understood.
Methods: In this study, a mapping population of Ludao (weedy rice) and Guangbaixiangzhan (GBXZ) was developed in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province, China, and was employed to construct a high-density genetic map by use of the RICE 1 K mGPS chip in 2021.
Plant Cell Environ
July 2025
Institute for Plant Protection, NARO, Tsukuba, Japan.
Germination represents the first major transition in plants, and seed dormancy influences germination timing. However, the mechanism by which variations in seed dormancy due to genetic variation or the maternal environment influence germination timing has not been studied in depth. In this study, the effects of temperature during seed maturation (maternal temperature) and genetic variation on weedy rice seedling emergence in a field environment were evaluated.
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