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Editing the nuclear localization signals of <scp><i>E1</i></scp> and <scp><i>E1Lb</i></scp> enables the production of tropical soybean in temperate growing regions

Yang Gao, Yuguo Zhang, Chuanyu Ma, Yanhui Chen, Chunxia Liu, Yanli Wang, Songyuan Wang, Xi Chen

2024Plant Biotechnology Journal14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Soybean is a typical short-day crop, and most commercial soybean cultivars are restricted to a relatively narrow range of latitudes due to photoperiod sensitivity. Photoperiod sensitivity hinders the utilization of soybean germplasms across geographical regions. When grown in temperate regions, tropical soybean responds to prolonged day length by increasing the vegetative growth phase and delaying flowering and maturity, which often pushes the harvest window past the first frost date. In this study, we used CRISPR/LbCas12a to edit a North American subtropical soybean cultivar named 06KG218440 that belongs to maturity group 5.5. By designing one gRNA to edit the nuclear localization signal (NLS) regions of both E1 and E1Lb, we created a series of new germplasms with shortened flowering time and time to maturity and determined their favourable latitudinal zone for cultivation. The novel partial function alleles successfully achieve yield and early maturity trade-offs and exhibit good agronomic traits and high yields in temperate regions. This work offers a straightforward editing strategy to modify subtropical and tropical soybean cultivars for temperate growing regions, a strategy that could be used to enrich genetic diversity in temperate breeding programmes and facilitate the introduction of important crop traits such as disease tolerance or high yield.

Topics & Concepts

Temperate climateBiologyCultivarSubtropicsGermplasmCropTropicsphotoperiodismFrost (temperature)AgronomyAdaptation (eye)BotanyEcologyGeographyMeteorologyNeuroscienceLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisSoybean genetics and cultivationNematode management and characterization studies