Ppd-H1 integrates drought stress signals to control spike development and flowering time in barley

J Exp Bot. 2021 Jan 20;72(1):122-136. doi: 10.1093/jxb/eraa261.

Abstract

Drought impairs growth and spike development, and is therefore a major cause of yield losses in the temperate cereals barley and wheat. Here, we show that the photoperiod response gene PHOTOPERIOD-H1 (Ppd-H1) interacts with drought stress signals to modulate spike development. We tested the effects of a continuous mild and a transient severe drought stress on developmental timing and spike development in spring barley cultivars with a natural mutation in ppd-H1 and derived introgression lines carrying the wild-type Ppd-H1 allele from wild barley. Mild drought reduced the spikelet number and delayed floral development in spring cultivars but not in the introgression lines with a wild-type Ppd-H1 allele. Similarly, drought-triggered reductions in plant height, and tiller and spike number were more pronounced in the parental lines compared with the introgression lines. Transient severe stress halted growth and floral development; upon rewatering, introgression lines, but not the spring cultivars, accelerated development so that control and stressed plants flowered almost simultaneously. These genetic differences in development were correlated with a differential down-regulation of the flowering promotors FLOWERING LOCUS T1 and the BARLEY MADS-box genes BM3 and BM8. Our findings therefore demonstrate that Ppd-H1 affects developmental plasticity in response to drought in barley.

Keywords: FLOWERING LOCUS T; Barley; MADS-box genes; development; drought; flowering; photoperiod; stress.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Droughts
  • Flowers / genetics
  • Flowers / metabolism
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
  • Genotype
  • Hordeum* / genetics
  • Hordeum* / metabolism
  • Photoperiod
  • Plant Proteins / genetics
  • Plant Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • Plant Proteins