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Dive into the research topics where Bianca Büttner is active.

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Featured researches published by Bianca Büttner.


Current Biology | 2012

The role of a pseudo-response regulator gene in life cycle adaptation and domestication of beet

Pierre A. Pin; Wenying Zhang; Sebastian H. Vogt; Nadine Dally; Bianca Büttner; Gretel Schulze-Buxloh; Noémie S. Jelly; Tansy Y. P. Chia; Euphemia Mutasa-Gottgens; Juliane C. Dohm; Heinz Himmelbauer; Bernd Weisshaar; Josef Kraus; Jan Gielen; Murielle Lommel; Guy Weyens; Bettina Wahl; Axel Schechert; Ove Nilsson; Christian Jung; Thomas Kraft; Andreas E. Müller

Life cycle adaptation to latitudinal and seasonal variation in photoperiod and temperature is a major determinant of evolutionary success in flowering plants. Whereas the life cycle of the dicotyledonous model species Arabidopsis thaliana is controlled by two epistatic genes, FLOWERING LOCUS C and FRIGIDA, three unrelated loci (VERNALIZATION) determine the spring and winter habits of monocotyledonous plants such as temperate cereals. In the core eudicot species Beta vulgaris, whose lineage diverged from that leading to Arabidopsis shortly after the monocot-dicot split 140 million years ago, the bolting locus B is a master switch distinguishing annuals from biennials. Here, we isolated B and show that the pseudo-response regulator gene BOLTING TIME CONTROL 1 (BvBTC1), through regulation of the FLOWERING LOCUS T genes, is absolutely necessary for flowering and mediates the response to both long days and vernalization. Our results suggest that domestication of beets involved the selection of a rare partial loss-of-function BvBTC1 allele that imparts reduced sensitivity to photoperiod that is restored by vernalization, thus conferring bienniality, and illustrate how evolutionary plasticity at a key regulatory point can enable new life cycle strategies.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2010

A survey of EMS-induced biennial Beta vulgaris mutants reveals a novel bolting locus which is unlinked to the bolting gene B

Bianca Büttner; Salah Fatouh Abou-Elwafa; Wenying Zhang; Christian Jung; Andreas E. Müller

Beta vulgaris is a facultative perennial species which exhibits large intraspecific variation in vernalization requirement and includes cultivated biennial forms such as the sugar beet. Vernalization requirement is under the genetic control of the bolting locus B on chromosome II. Previously, ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) mutagenesis of an annual accession had yielded several mutants which require vernalization to bolt and behave as biennials. Here, five F2 populations derived from crosses between biennial mutants and annual beets were tested for co-segregation of bolting phenotypes with genotypic markers located at the B locus. One mutant appears to be mutated at the B locus, suggesting that an EMS-induced mutation of B can be sufficient to abolish annual bolting. Co-segregation analysis in four populations indicates that the genetic control of bolting also involves previously unknown major loci not linked to B, one of which also affects bolting time and was genetically mapped to chromosome IX.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Conservation and divergence of autonomous pathway genes in the flowering regulatory network of Beta vulgaris

Salah Fatouh Abou-Elwafa; Bianca Büttner; Tansy Chia; Gretel Schulze-Buxloh; Uwe Hohmann; Effie Mutasa-Göttgens; Christian Jung; Andreas E. Müller

The transition from vegetative growth to reproductive development is a complex process that requires an integrated response to multiple environmental cues and endogenous signals. In Arabidopsis thaliana, which has a facultative requirement for vernalization and long days, the genes of the autonomous pathway function as floral promoters by repressing the central repressor and vernalization-regulatory gene FLC. Environmental regulation by seasonal changes in daylength is under control of the photoperiod pathway and its key gene CO. The root and leaf crop species Beta vulgaris in the caryophyllid clade of core eudicots, which is only very distantly related to Arabidopsis, is an obligate long-day plant and includes forms with or without vernalization requirement. FLC and CO homologues with related functions in beet have been identified, but the presence of autonomous pathway genes which function in parallel to the vernalization and photoperiod pathways has not yet been reported. Here, this begins to be addressed by the identification and genetic mapping of full-length homologues of the RNA-regulatory gene FLK and the chromatin-regulatory genes FVE, LD, and LDL1. When overexpressed in A. thaliana, BvFLK accelerates bolting in the Col-0 background and fully complements the late-bolting phenotype of an flk mutant through repression of FLC. In contrast, complementation analysis of BvFVE1 and the presence of a putative paralogue in beet suggest evolutionary divergence of FVE homologues. It is further shown that BvFVE1, unlike FVE in Arabidopsis, is under circadian clock control. Together, the data provide first evidence for evolutionary conservation of components of the autonomous pathway in B. vulgaris, while also suggesting divergence or subfunctionalization of one gene. The results are likely to be of broader relevance because B. vulgaris expands the spectrum of evolutionarily diverse species which are subject to differential developmental and/or environmental regulation of floral transition.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2018

Resistance to Rhynchosporium commune in a collection of European spring barley germplasm

M. E. Looseley; Lucie L. Griffe; Bianca Büttner; Kathryn M. Wright; Jill Middlefell-Williams; Hazel Bull; Paul D. Shaw; Malcolm Macaulay; Allan Booth; Günther Schweizer; Joanne Russell; Robbie Waugh; W. T. B. Thomas; Anna O. Avrova

Key messageAssociation analyses of resistance to Rhynchosporium commune in a collection of European spring barley germplasm detected 17 significant resistance quantitative trait loci. The most significant association was confirmed as Rrs1.AbstractRhynchosporium commune is a fungal pathogen of barley which causes a highly destructive and economically important disease known as rhynchosporium. Genome-wide association mapping was used to investigate the genetic control of host resistance to R. commune in a collection of predominantly European spring barley accessions. Multi-year disease nursery field trials revealed 8 significant resistance quantitative trait loci (QTL), whilst a separate association mapping analysis using historical data from UK national and recommended list trials identified 9 significant associations. The most significant association identified in both current and historical data sources, collocated with the known position of the major resistance gene Rrs1. Seedling assays with R. commune single-spore isolates expressing the corresponding avirulence protein NIP1 confirmed that this locus is Rrs1. These results highlight the significant and continuing contribution of Rrs1 to host resistance in current elite spring barley germplasm. Varietal height was shown to be negatively correlated with disease severity, and a resistance QTL was identified that co-localised with the semi-dwarfing gene sdw1, previously shown to contribute to disease escape. The remaining QTL represent novel resistances that are present within European spring barley accessions. Associated markers to Rrs1 and other resistance loci, identified in this study, represent a set of tools that can be exploited by breeders for the sustainable deployment of varietal resistance in new cultivars.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2013

Fine mapping of the Rrs1 resistance locus against scald in two large populations derived from Spanish barley landraces.

Kerstin Hofmann; C. Silvar; Ana M. Casas; Markus Herz; Bianca Büttner; M. Pilar Gracia; Bruno Contreras-Moreira; Hugh Wallwork; Ernesto Igartua; Günther Schweizer


Molecular Breeding | 2012

Genetic identification of a novel bolting locus in Beta vulgaris which promotes annuality independently of the bolting gene B

Salah Fatouh Abou-Elwafa; Bianca Büttner; Friedrich J. Kopisch-Obuch; Christian Jung; Andreas E. Müller


Archive | 2014

The Rrs1 resistance locus against scald in barley

Bianca Büttner; Cristina Silvar Casao; Ana María Casas Cendoya; Ernesto Igartua Arregui; Klaus Mayer; Anthony Bolger; Günther Schweizer


Archive | 2014

The Rrs1 locus and resistance against scald in barley.

Bianca Büttner; Cristina Silvar Casao; Ana María Casas Cendoya; Ernesto Igartua Arregui; Klaus F. X. Mayer; Günther Schweizer


Archive | 2013

Exploiting genetic variation for resistance to important phathogens in barley.

Frank Ordon; Dragan Perovic; R. Rauser; Bianca Büttner; Günther Schweizer; Cristina Silvar Casao; Ana María Casas Cendoya; María Pilar Gracia Gimeno; Bruno Contreras-Moreira; Ernesto Igartua Arregui; María Ángeles Moralejo; José Luis Molina-Cano; M. Roccaro; I. Somssich; Björn Usadel; J. Pellicer; M. Bagge; Viktor Korzun; J. Förster


Archive | 2013

Development of diagnostic markers and physical mapping for the Rrs1 resistance locus against scald

Bianca Büttner; Cristina Silvar Casao; Ana María Casas Cendoya; Ernesto Igartua Arregui; Klaus Mayer; Günther Schweizer

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Bruno Contreras-Moreira

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana M. Casas

Spanish National Research Council

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C. Silvar

Spanish National Research Council

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