The genomes of six major grass species can be aligned by dissecting the individual chromosomes into segments and rearranging these linkage blocks into highly similar structures.
Four sets of near-isogenic lines carrying different
combinations of the alleles Rht-B1b, Rht-D1b and
Rht-B1c for gibberellin-insensitive dwarfism in hexaploid
wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were compared with tall
controls in a series of yield trials in eastern England and central
Germany. In all four varietal backgrounds the effects of
Rht-B1b and Rht-D1b were similar (plant height ≈
86 and 83% of tall controls respectively) and in combination reduced
plant height to c. 58%. The Rht-B1c allele caused
more severe dwarfism (c. 50%) and, when combined with
Rht-D1b, reduced plant height still further to c.
41%.Data from the trials were consistent with a model for
height/yield relationships in which the pleiotropic effects of
the Rht alleles on yield can be inferred from their primary
function: insensitivity to gibberellin limits stem extension
growth, decreasing assimilate demand for this organ and diverting it
to the developing ear (which is not itself dwarfed). The net balance
between the resulting increase in harvest index and the curvilinear
relationship observed between plant height and total shoot yield
results in optimum grain yields at intermediate plant heights.Yield advantages of shorter plants over tall controls were evident
over several trials with mean grain yields ranging from 200 to 760 g
m−2. The optimum plant height for yield improvement in
different genetic backgrounds was achieved by different Rht
alleles according to the background varietal height, such that
intrinsically taller genotypes required more potent Rht
alleles to achieve maximum potential grain yield.Ear yield components showed increases in grain number due to
Rht pleiotropy, from which it is inferred that the number of
grains per ear is limited by supply of assimilates pre-anthesis.
Increases in grain number were associated with decreases in mean weight
per grain which varied according to severity of dwarfism and varietal
background, so that the net effect on grain yield per ear was sometimes
positive, sometimes negative, and sometimes neutral in different
Rht/variety combinations.
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