2010
DOI: 10.1007/s12284-010-9048-5
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Submergence Tolerant Rice: SUB1’s Journey from Landrace to Modern Cultivar

Abstract: Rice landraces tolerant of up to 2 weeks of complete submergence were collected from farmers' fields in the 1950s. Success in fine mapping of SUBMERGENCE 1 (SUB1), a robust quantitative trait locus from the submergence tolerant FR13A landrace, has enabled marker-assisted breeding of high-yielding rice capable of enduring transient complete submergence. At the molecular level, SUB1 is a variable polygenic locus encoding two or three ethylene responsive factor (ERF) DNA binding proteins. All Oryza sativa accessi… Show more

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Cited by 308 publications
(227 citation statements)
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“…Leaf gas films cling to the surface of leaves of many semiaquatic species . Bailey-Serres et al, 2010). There are also landraces that can be dry seeded directly into shallow paddies (less than 10 cm depth) that can become established despite limited oxygen availability (Angaji et al, 2010;Ismail et al, 2012).…”
Section: Floods and Flooding Survival Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leaf gas films cling to the surface of leaves of many semiaquatic species . Bailey-Serres et al, 2010). There are also landraces that can be dry seeded directly into shallow paddies (less than 10 cm depth) that can become established despite limited oxygen availability (Angaji et al, 2010;Ismail et al, 2012).…”
Section: Floods and Flooding Survival Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many 'resilience' traits are being bred into crops: drought-resistant cereals which can survive water shortage, harsh heat, and light, and proceed to yield a crop, are very important for the future of Australian farming (Chaves et al 2003). Flood-tolerant rice varieties are another example (Bailey-Serres et al 2010).…”
Section: Resiliencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although economic considerations have contributed to lack of interest in 'generalist' crops, these crops would also be difficult to breed from existing crop varieties given the likely loss of such traits during previous breeding efforts (Tanksley and McCouch 1997). Moreover, resilience traits are multi-genic, flood-tolerant rice being a notable exception (Septiningsih et al 2009;Bailey-Serres et al 2010;Xu et al 2006). Thus, similar breeding considerations apply as described above for nutritional quality breeding: genomic breeding will also play a growing role in breeding for crop resilience.…”
Section: Resiliencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A volume of study supports the 'quiescent strategy' as a principal mechanism of submergence tolerance, and it has been well established that the ethyleneresponse-factor-like genes located at the SUB1 locus plays a key role (2,8,9,10,39). Meanwhile, the "elongation escape or avoidance strategy" has been considered as another mechanism for adaptation to submergence stress, whereby rice plants can escape from or avoid the stress to keep normal metabolic pathways (12).…”
Section: Expression Profiles Of Osnhx Paralogs Under Submergencementioning
confidence: 99%