Skip to main content

scientist have uncovered the genetic significance of purple rice

puple rice photo

The mysterious ways of genes influencing the character of crop plants through long periods of domestication, selection and modern breeding continues to perplex genomics specialists, as found out by the genome researchers working on coloured rice, Purpleputtu recently. Even the whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) of the Purpleputtu rice variety has not fully opened the windows to the genetic secrets to the researchers.
Researchers at the SciGenom Research Foundation, Chennai, said the genome sequencing of Purpleputtu revealed around 65,000 unique genetic mutations compared with the reference sequence, of which about 50 are in the genes of the colour pathway. The question of how specific genes and gene networks control the expression of its uniqueness, the purple colour, still remains an unanswered mystery, say researchers.
In most cultivated white grain rice varieties, a regulatory gene, Rc is missing 14 base pairs, which is believed to have changed the phenotype of seeds from coloured to white. The presence of the 14 base pairs is believed to help regulate the anthocyanin pathway enzymes to produce coloured seeds, and its absence is accounted for the grains remaining more or less white. The sequencing revealed that the 14 base pairs of Rc gene were absent in Purpleputtu variety. Yet, its seeds remained true to the nomenclature and were found retaining the colour, explained George Thomas, Director, SGRF, and Arjula R. Reddy, advisor to the Foundation. This leads to the conclusion that there are alternative regulatory pathways operating in Purpleputtu, they explained.
The Foundation decided to focus on the purple rice variety as many traditional lines or their wild cousins have not yet been fully sequenced. This traditional variety, while being grown as a bio-barrier and as a marker line between test plots in rice fields to prevent cross-pollination, remained genetically uncorrupted and retained its unique characters over the years. The seed shattering gene and a few other domestication-related genes were found intact in a highly conserved area of about 4.5 million base pairs of Purpleputtu rice genome.
The whole genome sequence has been released in the public domain to serve as a reference point for indica rices, particularly coloured ones, they said.
The focus has now shifted to “understanding the molecular regulation of colour development, domestication and responses to stresses like drought, salt, extreme temperatures and photoperiodic insensitivity of this rice in order to improve it for better performance and its possible utility in breeding for these traits” they explained.
keywords: GENETICS, RICE, PURPLE, DISCOVERED

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

ISRO ready for a critical crew rescuing test

The Crew Module Atmospheric Re-entry Experiment which was test-flown by the ISRO two years ago.—PHOTO: THULASI KAKKAT It will test how fast and effectively the crew module of an intended space mission could punch out from a spacecraft The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is gearing up to conduct a critical ‘crew bailout test’ to see how fast and effectively the crew module of an intended space mission could punch out from the spacecraft safely in the event of an emergency. The test, known as Pad Abort, will be held at the launch pad of Sriharikota High Altitude Range (SHAR) in a month or two, Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) Director K. Sivan told The Hindu in an interaction on the sidelines of the ongoing expo in connection with the World Space Week celebrations at Ernakulathappan ground here. The test forms part of a gamut of critical technologies being developed by the space agency as it awaits the nod from the government for the ambitious ‘human in sp...

MIT scientists makes use of terahertz waves to read closed books

 some Scientists, have invented a new technology that can read the pages of a closed book, an advance that may help archaeologists look into antique books without touching them. Researchers, including Ramesh Raskar from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the U.S, tested a prototype of the system on a stack of papers, each with one letter printed on it. The system was able to correctly identify the letters on the top nine sheets. “The Metropolitan Museum in New York showed a lot of interest in this, because they want to, for example, look into some antique books that they don’t even want to touch,” said Barmak Heshmat, a research scientist at MIT. He said that the system could be used to analyse any materials organised in thin layers, such as coatings on machine parts or pharmaceuticals. Researchers from MIT and Georgia Institute of Technology developed the algorithms that acquire images from individual sheets in stacks of paper, and interprets the o...

best-reasons-why-marijuana-could-be an-options-to-people-being-addicted-with-alcohol-and-narcotics-drugs

Using marijuana could help some alcoholics and people addicted to opioids kick their habits, a UBC study has found. drugs addict can rely to marijuana   "Research suggests that people may be using cannabis as an exit drug to reduce use of substances that are potentially more harmful, such as opioid pain medication," said the study's lead investigator Zach Walsh, associate professor of psychology at UBC's Okanagan campus. have you read this ? a false belief about menopause This comprehensive review of research on medical cannabis use and mental health also found some evidence that cannabis may help with symptoms of depression, PTSD and social anxiety. However, the review concluded that cannabis use might not be recommended for conditions such as bipolar disorder and psychosis. "In reviewing the limited evidence on medical cannabis, it appears that patients and others who have advocated for cannabis as a tool for harm ...