Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation

Sustainable agriculture requires locally adapted varieties that produce nutritious food with limited agricultural inputs. Genome engineering represents a viable approach to develop cultivars that fulfill these criteria. For example, the red Hassawi rice, a native landrace of Saudi Arabia, tolerates...

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Autores principales: Sedeek, Khalid, Mohammed, Nahed, Zhou, Yong, Zuccolo, Andrea, Sanikommu, Krishnaveni, Kantharajappa, Sunitha, Al-Bader, Noor, Tashkandi, Manal, Wing, Rod A., Mahfouz, Magdy M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2024
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163822
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author Sedeek, Khalid
Mohammed, Nahed
Zhou, Yong
Zuccolo, Andrea
Sanikommu, Krishnaveni
Kantharajappa, Sunitha
Al-Bader, Noor
Tashkandi, Manal
Wing, Rod A.
Mahfouz, Magdy M.
author_browse Al-Bader, Noor
Kantharajappa, Sunitha
Mahfouz, Magdy M.
Mohammed, Nahed
Sanikommu, Krishnaveni
Sedeek, Khalid
Tashkandi, Manal
Wing, Rod A.
Zhou, Yong
Zuccolo, Andrea
author_facet Sedeek, Khalid
Mohammed, Nahed
Zhou, Yong
Zuccolo, Andrea
Sanikommu, Krishnaveni
Kantharajappa, Sunitha
Al-Bader, Noor
Tashkandi, Manal
Wing, Rod A.
Mahfouz, Magdy M.
author_sort Sedeek, Khalid
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustainable agriculture requires locally adapted varieties that produce nutritious food with limited agricultural inputs. Genome engineering represents a viable approach to develop cultivars that fulfill these criteria. For example, the red Hassawi rice, a native landrace of Saudi Arabia, tolerates local drought and high-salinity conditions and produces grain with diverse health-promoting phytochemicals. However, Hassawi has a long growth cycle, high cultivation costs, low productivity, and susceptibility to lodging. Here, to improve these undesirable traits via genome editing, we established efficient regeneration and Agrobacterium-mediated transformation protocols for Hassawi. In addition, we generated the first high-quality reference genome and targeted the key flowering repressor gene, Hd4, thus shortening the plant's lifecycle and height. Using CRISPR/Cas9 multiplexing, we simultaneously disrupted negative regulators of flowering time (Hd2, Hd4, and Hd5), grain size (GS3), grain number (GN1a), and plant height (Sd1). The resulting homozygous mutant lines flowered extremely early (∼56 days) and had shorter stems (approximately 107 cm), longer grains (by 5.1%), and more grains per plant (by 50.2%), thereby enhancing overall productivity. Furthermore, the awns of grains were 86.4% shorter compared to unedited plants. Moreover, the modified rice grain displayed improved nutritional attributes. As a result, the modified Hassawi rice combines several desirable traits that can incentivize large-scale cultivation and reduce malnutrition.
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spelling CGSpace1638222024-12-19T14:11:35Z Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation Sedeek, Khalid Mohammed, Nahed Zhou, Yong Zuccolo, Andrea Sanikommu, Krishnaveni Kantharajappa, Sunitha Al-Bader, Noor Tashkandi, Manal Wing, Rod A. Mahfouz, Magdy M. Sustainable agriculture requires locally adapted varieties that produce nutritious food with limited agricultural inputs. Genome engineering represents a viable approach to develop cultivars that fulfill these criteria. For example, the red Hassawi rice, a native landrace of Saudi Arabia, tolerates local drought and high-salinity conditions and produces grain with diverse health-promoting phytochemicals. However, Hassawi has a long growth cycle, high cultivation costs, low productivity, and susceptibility to lodging. Here, to improve these undesirable traits via genome editing, we established efficient regeneration and Agrobacterium-mediated transformation protocols for Hassawi. In addition, we generated the first high-quality reference genome and targeted the key flowering repressor gene, Hd4, thus shortening the plant's lifecycle and height. Using CRISPR/Cas9 multiplexing, we simultaneously disrupted negative regulators of flowering time (Hd2, Hd4, and Hd5), grain size (GS3), grain number (GN1a), and plant height (Sd1). The resulting homozygous mutant lines flowered extremely early (∼56 days) and had shorter stems (approximately 107 cm), longer grains (by 5.1%), and more grains per plant (by 50.2%), thereby enhancing overall productivity. Furthermore, the awns of grains were 86.4% shorter compared to unedited plants. Moreover, the modified rice grain displayed improved nutritional attributes. As a result, the modified Hassawi rice combines several desirable traits that can incentivize large-scale cultivation and reduce malnutrition. 2024-04 2024-12-19T12:53:03Z 2024-12-19T12:53:03Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163822 en Open Access Elsevier Sedeek, Khalid; Mohammed, Nahed; Zhou, Yong; Zuccolo, Andrea; Sanikommu, Krishnaveni; Kantharajappa, Sunitha; Al-Bader, Noor; Tashkandi, Manal; Wing, Rod A. and Mahfouz, Magdy M. 2024. Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation. Plant Science, Volume 341 p. 112018
spellingShingle Sedeek, Khalid
Mohammed, Nahed
Zhou, Yong
Zuccolo, Andrea
Sanikommu, Krishnaveni
Kantharajappa, Sunitha
Al-Bader, Noor
Tashkandi, Manal
Wing, Rod A.
Mahfouz, Magdy M.
Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title_full Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title_fullStr Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title_full_unstemmed Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title_short Multitrait engineering of Hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
title_sort multitrait engineering of hassawi red rice for sustainable cultivation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163822
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