Your Soup Served Fresh

Tweet Subscribe to receive your daily serving of Capital Soup. Tweet

News. Views. Unfiltered.

Tweet Submit your news and opinions to Capital Soup free of charge. Tweet

Advertise in the Soup.

Tweet For rates and availability, contact ads@capitalsoup.com. Tweet

Dish it Up.

Tweet Order special services or featured positioning at services@capitalsoup.com. Tweet

Home » Education » Currently Reading:

Researchers identify gene that allows corn to grow in poor conditions

March 12, 2013 Government No Comments

From the University of Florida
News Desk http://www.news.ufl.edu
newsdesk@ufl.edu
352-392-0186, fax 392-3358
101 Tigert Hall / Box 113075
Gainesville, FL 32611-3075

Researchers identify gene that allows corn to grow in poor conditions

For media inquiries call Marilee Griffin at 352-273-7891 or email margri@ufl.edu.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Approximately 30 percent of the world’s total land is too acidic to support crop production, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. However, a solution may lie in a strand of corn that is able to grow successfully in acidic soil, thanks to a genetic variation recently identified with help from the University of Florida Genetics Institute.

Findings published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences show that certain strands of corn growing in acidic tropical and subtropical areas have three copies of a particular gene. The expression of the copies results in an increased tolerance to aluminum — a chemical element toxic to many plants at high levels in acidic soil.

The triplicate gene may ultimately be used to breed or genetically modify plants to adapt to soil containing high levels of aluminum.

“Identifying genes that make plants more tolerant of aluminum is very critical for farmers growing crops where productivity is suboptimal due to acidic soil,” said Matias Kirst, co-author and a member of Genetics Institute.

In plants, tolerance to aluminum is a phenotype — a trait such as growth, physiology and yield. It has been long suspected that multiple gene copies determine certain phenotypes, but this is the first actual proof, said Kirst, an assistant professor in UF’s College of Agricultural and Life Sciences.

“This is the first time copy number variation has been shown to affect a phenotype in plants,” Kirst said. “From now on, people will be paying more attention to this type of variation to identify and explain traits.”

The findings suggest that the changes in gene copy number may be a rapid evolutionary response to new environments or climate change. The fact that genome changes are still happening today, after the domestication of maize, is relevant, said lead author Lyza Maron.

“That has implications for adaptation,” said Maron, a research associate at the Robert W. Holley Center for Agriculture and Health at Cornell University. “It’s important, more than ever, that we can breed crops in a changing environment.”

-30-

******************************
The University of Florida is one of the nation’s largest public universities. A member of the Association of American Universities, UF posted research expenditures totaling $740 million in 2011. Through its research and other activities, UF contributes more than $8.76 billion a year to Florida’s economy and has a total employment impact of more than 100,000 jobs statewide. www.ufl.edu. University of Florida Research: Working for Florida.

SunDeck: What’s A-Twitter in FL Politics

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

ADVERTISEMENTS

Sachs Media Group

Florida Sports Fan

Archives

2013 Florida Capitol Press Corps Guide

2013 Florida Capitol Press Corps Guide

Sachs Media Group this week released its annual Capitol Press Corps Guide, the resource to find and connect with reporters who cover Florida from the capital city. The pocket-sized 2013 guide is a listing of all major news outlets in Florida that have capital bureaus, including contact information for individual reporters who cover issues of statewide importance. The 2013 guide includes reporters’ Twitter handles, recognizing the growing importance of social media in reporting. Supplies are limited. To request a hard copy, email herbie@sachsmedia.com.

Florida NewsMakers

Opinion

For National Trauma Awareness Month Let’s Agree: All Floridians Deserve Access to Trauma Care

May 21, 2013

Tweet For National Trauma Awareness Month Let’s Agree: All Floridians Deserve Access to Trauma Care By Dr. James M. Hurst May is National Trauma Awareness month, and it finds Florida trying to write a prescription for improving access to trauma care for everyone. As an expert in the field of trauma, I was somewhat encouraged [...]

Rep. Janet Cruz: The News from Cruz

May 14, 2013

Tweet 2013 Session Highlights By Rep. Janet Cruz As I return to District 62 from the 2013 legislative session I wanted to fill you in on some of the issues that we have been working on the past two months that might be of interest to you. Elections Perhaps one of the biggest issues this [...]

Rep. Janet Adkins: Letter to the Editor, May 13, 2013

May 13, 2013

Tweet Letter to the Editor May 13, 2013 Session, Week 9 By Rep. Janet Adkins The final week of the 115th legislative session, since Florida’s statehood in 1845, began with the pre-dawn drive to Tallahassee on Monday morning. The weekend at home with Fernandina Beach’s Shrimp Festival Parade and Jacksonville Beach’s Opening of the Beaches [...]