bioRxiv | 2019

Increased nitrogen fixation and remobilization may contribute to higher seed protein without a yield penalty in a soybean introgression line

 
 

Abstract


The development of soybean varieties with higher seed protein concentration has been hindered by a negative correlation between seed protein concentration and yield. Benning HP, a genotype that breaks this tradeoff, contains a high protein allele introgressed into the cultivar Benning. Because seed protein is thought to be limited by N, field and growth chamber experiments were performed to identify the N flux(es) that enable Benning HP’s increased seed protein without a yield penalty. When the N source was completely controlled in growth chambers, Benning HP was able to fix more N than its recurrent parent, but this response depended on the strain of the rhizobia symbiont and was not observed at all developmental stages. In the field, Benning HP remobilized N from its leaves at a higher rate during seed fill, but this response was only observed in one of the years studied. These results demonstrate that Benning HP has higher potential for N fixation and N remobilization from vegetative tissue compared to its lower protein recurrent parent, but those traits are not consistently expressed and may depend on environmental and sink control.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1101/602748
Language English
Journal bioRxiv

Full Text