A new opening for wheat seed production
eXtra Botany
Insight
A new opening for wheat seed production
Laura E. Dixon*, Stefano Bencivenga* and Scott A. Boden†
Department of Crop Genetics, John Innes Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, NR4 7UH, United Kingdom
†
Correspondence:
*These authors contributed equally to this work
We are currently facing a global challenge to sustainably
increase crop yields, with the projected requirements far
exceeding current production. To meet these needs, a step
change in yield production similar to that observed during
the Green Revolution is required. One method that has been
postulated to provide such a change involves the successful implementation of hybrid wheat production. If hybrid
wheat follows the same biology observed in other crops, such
as hybrid maize and rice (Tester and Langridge, 2010), it is
anticipated to produce a significant yield increase along with
other vigour-related benefits, such as disease resistance and
increased robustness to abiotic stresses including drought
and temperature fluctuations (Tester and Langridge, 2010;
Longin et al., 2012). Successful development of hybrid wheat
to produce superior yielding and high-quality cultivars could
also facilitate an economically sustainable expansion of
wheat cultivation into regions that are currently difficult to
regulate for commercial breeding companies.
Towards out-crossing wheat
The major limitation in the production of hybrid wheat is
similar to that faced by researchers crossing diverse genotypes under glasshouse conditions: the autogamous, or
self-fertilizing, nature of the wheat flower. Often when the
anthers emerge, they have already dehisced and the flower
has self-pollinated. Currently, self-fertilization is prevented
in hybrid wheat production by two methods (Whitford et al.,
2013; Mette et al., 2015). The first is chemical application to
the female receptor lines. This is expensive, can give variable
results and requires precision spraying in favourable weather
conditions to avoid triggering sterility in the male donor lines,
which are grown in close proximity (see Box 1).
The second method involves using male-sterile lines that do
not produce pollen, which is favourable because it removes
the need for chemical manipulation. However, use of malesterile lines alone is insufficient, as they must also be receptive
via an open flower to be pollinated by neighbouring wheat
plants. It is this aspect of wheat flower development, characterized by the first and second openings of the wheat flower,
that has been reported by Okada et al. (2017). The authors
show that male-sterile lines have a prolonged second opening,
facilitated by radial swelling of the unfertilized ovary (see Box
1), which increases the opportunity for cross-pollination. The
open flower habit also has some attractive applications in the
laboratory – crossing of lines is laborious and prone to failure, as capturing pollen at the correct stage is a lottery. Using
lines with an open, receptive female flower would make it possible to pollinate by wind-assisted pollination, dramatically
increasing the chance of successful fertilization.
Further advantages of understanding the
wheat flower
Beyond these practical applications, the work of Okada
et al. also presents new research opportunities. For example,
the system provides an interesting way of characterizing the
cross-talk between fertilization and ovule development or,
more generally, the perception of fertilization by the plant.
Fertilization is critical in a plant’s life-cycle and more generally for evolution. As already mentioned, ovule development is synchronized with stamen formation to guarantee
successful fertilization in many self-pollinating plant species.
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Crop plant domestication has targeted a variety of traits,
including synchronous development of ovules and stamens to maximize fertilization and seed production. In
wheat, with its autogamous, or self-fertilizing, flowers,
this is very attractive for guaranteeing yield but extremely
frustrating for a researcher trying to cross individuals of
distinct genotypes, and even more so for a breeder trying to generate hybrids. Now, Okada et al. (2017) have
provided a turning point by characterizing the developmental physiology of wheat florets opening after a few
days post-anthesis (‘second opening’). This additional
opportunity for pollination facilitates out-crossing, and
provides a method to further understand the regulation
of wheat flower architecture and development.
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Box 1. Hybrid wheat seed production
(A) A cartoon illustrating the field arrangement of the male pollen donor line and female receptor line commonly used for hybrid seed production. The male pollen donor line is taller than
the female receptor line, and extrudes anthers to release pollen from the flowers prior to dehiscence. Pollen is then dispersed over the shorter female receptor line, such as by wind, and
received by the male-sterile open florets (yellow star). (B) A schematic illustrating the ‘second
opening’ of a male-sterile floret (yellow star), generated genetically or using chemical treatment, relative to a floret with fertile anthers. In florets with fertile anthers, pollen is released from
the anthers and received by the stigma; this leads to fertilization of the ovule and initiation of
grain development, with vertical growth within the floret. In male-sterile florets, radial swelling
of the ovary helps push open the floret, so that pollen from a male donor line can be received
by a female receptor line.
second opening and cross-pollination and provide new evolutionary insights. For example, it would be interesting to
repeat the ovary analysis in Okada et al. (2017) using wheat
populations with various degrees of out-crossing (Martin,
1990; Hucl, 1996), and to investigate whether the success of
out-crossing is associated with particular environmental conditions to determine if cross-pollination, or the alternative
auto-pollination, provides an advantage under certain growth
conditions or geographical regions.
An exciting next step will be to investigate the possibility
of uncoupling seed development from fertilization. This has
already been achieved in Arabidopsis (Chaudury et al., 1997)
where in the mutant fis the seeds develop without fertilization.
Using the analysis in Okada et al. (2017), a mutagenesis of
male-sterile plants and then screening for spikes that produce
ovaries with a phenotype resembling fertilized seeds would
provide the genetic material required to dissect this response.
Okada et al. (2017) have conducted a rigorous and elegant
anal (...truncated)