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[ÓÅÐãÎÄÕÂÍÆ¼ö] Speed breeding£ºÒ»ÖÖËõ¶Ì×÷ÎïÉú³¤ÖÜÆÚ·½·¨ ÒÑÓÐ1È˲ÎÓë
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½üÈÕ£¬ÉúÎïÔ¤Ó¡±¾ÍøÕ¾bioRxivÔÚÏß·¢±íÌâΪ¡°Speed breeding: a powerful tool to accelerate crop research and breeding ¡±Ñо¿ÂÛÎÄ£¬Ìá³öÒ»ÖÖ½Ð×ö¡°speed breeding¡±µÄ·½·¨£¬²ÉÓø÷½·¨¿ÉÒÔʵÏÖ´ºÐ¡Âó(Triticum aestivum)¡¢Ó²ÖÊСÂó(T. durum)¡¢´óÂó(Hordeum vulgare)¡¢Ó¥×ì¶¹(Cicer arietinum)ºÍÍã¶¹ (Pisum sativum) Ò»ÄêÅàÑø6´ú£¬¶ÔÓÍ²Ë (Brassica napus)¿ÉÒÔÒ»ÄêÅàÑø4´ú£¬¶ø´«Í³µÄÎÂÊÒÅàÑøÖ»ÄÜ×öµ½2-3´ú¡£ Figure 1 | Speed breeding accelerates generation time of some major crop plants for research and breeding. Compared to a glasshouse with a natural photoperiod, where only 2-3 generations of wheat, barley, chickpea and canola can be achieved per year (right), speed breeding enables 4-6 generations of these crops to be grown in a year (left). ¡°speed breeding¡±¼¼ÊõÓ봫ͳÎÂÊÒÅàÑøµÄÒ»¸ö×î´ó²»Í¬ÊÇ£¬Ç°Õß²ÉÓÃÁË22:2СʱµÄ¹â£º°µÑ»·£¬¶øºóÕß²ÉÓÃ12:12СʱµÄ¹â£º°µÑ»·¡£Ç°Õßͬʱ²ÉÓÃÁ˱ȽϽÚÄܵÄLEDÀ´½øÐв¹¹â¡£ Figure 2 | Accelerated plant growth and development under speed breeding (left) compared to control (right) conditions. a, Wheat (T. aestivum cv. Cadenza) at 38 days post sowing. b, Barley (H. vulgare cv. Braemar) at 41 days post sowing. c, Brachypodium (B. distachyon accession Bd21) at 36 days post sowing. Scale bar = 20 cm. d, Representative graph depicting the development stages of wheat, barley and brachypodium (x-axis in days) under speed breeding (top graph for each crop) conditions in a controlled environment chamber compared to control conditions (bottom graph for each crop) in a glasshouse in UK summer with no supplementary light or heat. e, Canola (B. napus cv. Bravo), pictured at 50 days post sowing. Scale bar = 50 cm. f, Chickpea (C. arietinum cv. Jimbour), pictured at 35 days post sowing. g, Representative graph depicting the development stages of canola and chickpea (x-axis in days) under speed breeding conditions in a supplemented glasshouse (top graph for each crop) compared to control conditions (bottom graph for each crop) in a glasshouse in Queensland, Australia, with no supplementary light or heating. Figure 3 | Adult plant phenotypes in wheat and barley under speed breeding conditions. a, Loss of function of the awn suppressor B1 locus in T. aestivum cv. Paragon (mutant on left, wild type on right). b, Green Revolution Reduced height (Rht) dwarfing genes under speed breeding conditions. From left to right, T. aestivum cv. Maring¨¢ wild type, Maring¨¢ Rht-1, Maring¨¢ Rht-3. Scale bar = 100 cm. c, Fusarium Head Blight progression in spikes of the resistant T. aestivum cv. Sumai 3 (right) and the susceptible cv. Timstein (left) at 7 and 10 days post inoculation (dpi). d, Two instances depicting the flowering time of the F6 hybrid (right in both panels) derived from T. aestivum cv. Paragon (left in both panels) and T. aestivum landrace W352 (centre in both panels). In the left panel, the parents flower while the F6 is just beginning to boot at 44 days; in the right panel, the F6 hybrid is shown with developed spikes at 67 days when the parents have moved into senescence. e, Reduced glaucousness of Eceriferum (Cer) mutants in H. vulgare cv. Bonus. |
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