The fern Azolla filiculoides shapes rice root architecture: phytohormone and transcriptomic analyses to uncover info-chemical signals between the partners
Poster
Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
Achieving a steady increase in cereal crop yields has become a research priority [1].
Rice is both a model grass species and the world's second-most produced staple cereal crop.
Azolla filiculoides is a freshwater pteridophyte that lives in symbiosis with the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Trichormus azollae, which is also capable of emitting biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs), phytohormones, and other molecules that likely act as key regulators of rice productivity and fitness [2,3].
The co-cultivation improved rice root architecture
Overexpression of NR was likely responsible for the higher accumulation of NO in the roots of co-cultivated plants
ABA is the candidate phytohormone signal released by A. filiculoides-T. azollae
Transcriptomics suggested that the roots of co-cultivated rice faced a condition of iron toxicity
Coming soon: Iron quantification, qRT-PCR analysis of target genes and functional assessment of target genes using mutants
Tipologia CRIS:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Azolla; spp. rice; productivity; root architecture
Elenco autori:
Paolocci, Francesco
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