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Featured researches published by Dali Zeng.


Nature | 2003

Control of tillering in rice

Xueyong Li; Qian Qian; Zhiming Fu; Yonghong Wang; Guosheng Xiong; Dali Zeng; Xiaoqun Wang; Xinfang Liu; Sheng Teng; Fujimoto Hiroshi; Ming Yuan; Da Luo; Bin Han; Jiayang Li

Tillering in rice (Oryza sativa L.) is an important agronomic trait for grain production, and also a model system for the study of branching in monocotyledonous plants. Rice tiller is a specialized grain-bearing branch that is formed on the unelongated basal internode and grows independently of the mother stem (culm) by means of its own adventitious roots. Rice tillering occurs in a two-stage process: the formation of an axillary bud at each leaf axil and its subsequent outgrowth. Although the morphology and histology and some mutants of rice tillering have been well described, the molecular mechanism of rice tillering remains to be elucidated. Here we report the isolation and characterization of MONOCULM 1 (MOC1), a gene that is important in the control of rice tillering. The moc1 mutant plants have only a main culm without any tillers owing to a defect in the formation of tiller buds. MOC1 encodes a putative GRAS family nuclear protein that is expressed mainly in the axillary buds and functions to initiate axillary buds and to promote their outgrowth.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Allelic diversities in rice starch biosynthesis lead to a diverse array of rice eating and cooking qualities

Zhixi Tian; Qian Qian; Qiaoquan Liu; Meixian Yan; Xinfang Liu; Changjie Yan; Guifu Liu; Zhenyu Gao; Shuzhu Tang; Dali Zeng; Yonghong Wang; Jianming Yu; Minghong Gu; Jiayang Li

More than half of the worlds population uses rice as a source of carbon intake every day. Improving grain quality is thus essential to rice consumers. The three main properties that determine rice eating and cooking quality—amylose content, gel consistency, and gelatinization temperature—correlate with one another, but the underlying mechanism of these properties remains unclear. Through an association analysis approach, we found that genes related to starch synthesis cooperate with each other to form a fine regulating network that controls the eating and cooking quality and defines the correlation among these three properties. Genetic transformation results verified the association findings and also suggested the possibility of developing elite cultivars through modification with selected major and/or minor starch synthesis-related genes.


Cell Research | 2007

LAZY1 controls rice shoot gravitropism through regulating polar auxin transport

Peijin Li; Yonghong Wang; Qian Qian; Zhiming Fu; Mei Wang; Dali Zeng; Baohua Li; Xiu-Jie Wang; Jiayang Li

Tiller angle of rice (Oryza sativa L.) is an important agronomic trait that contributes to grain production, and has long attracted attentions of breeders for achieving ideal plant architecture to improve grain yield. Although enormous efforts have been made over the past decades to study mutants with extremely spreading or compact tillers, the molecular mechanism underlying the control of tiller angle of cereal crops remains unknown. Here we report the cloning of the LAZY1 (LA1) gene that regulates shoot gravitropism by which the rice tiller angle is controlled. We show that LA1, a novel grass-specific gene, is temporally and spatially expressed, and plays a negative role in polar auxin transport (PAT). Loss-of-function of LA1 enhances PAT greatly and thus alters the endogenous IAA distribution in shoots, leading to the reduced gravitropism, and therefore the tiller-spreading phenotype of rice plants.


Plant Journal | 2009

Short panicle1 encodes a putative PTR family transporter and determines rice panicle size

Shengben Li; Qian Qian; Zhiming Fu; Dali Zeng; Xiangbing Meng; Junko Kyozuka; Masahiko Maekawa; Xudong Zhu; Jian Zhang; Jiayang Li; Yonghong Wang

The architecture of the rice inflorescence, which is determined mainly by the number and length of primary and secondary inflorescence branches, is of importance in both agronomy and developmental biology. The position and number of primary branches are established during the phase transition from vegetative to reproductive growth, and several of the genes identified as participating in this process do so by regulating the meristemic activities of inflorescence. However, little is known about the molecular mechanism that controls inflorescence branch elongation. Here, we report on a novel rice mutant, short panicle1 (sp1), which is defective in rice panicle elongation, and thus leads to the short-panicle phenotype. Gene cloning and characterization indicate that SP1 encodes a putative transporter that belongs to the peptide transporter (PTR) family. This conclusion is based on the findings that SP1 contains a conserved PTR2 domain consisting of 12 transmembrane domains, and that the SP1-GFP fusion protein is localized in the plasma membrane. The SP1 gene is highly expressed in the phloem of the branches of young panicles, which is consistent with the predicted function of SP1 and the sp1 phenotype. Phylogenetic analysis implies that SP1 might be a nitrate transporter. However, neither nitrate transporter activity nor any other compounds transported by known PTR proteins could be detected in either a Xenopus oocyte or yeast system, in our study, suggesting that SP1 may need other component(s) to be able to function as a transporter, or that it transports unknown substrates in the monocotyledonous rice plant.


Plant Physiology | 2006

GOLD HULL AND INTERNODE2 Encodes a Primarily Multifunctional Cinnamyl-Alcohol Dehydrogenase in Rice

Kewei Zhang; Qian Qian; Zejun Huang; Yiqin Wang; Ming Li; Lilan Hong; Dali Zeng; Minghong Gu; Chengcai Chu; Zhukuan Cheng

Lignin content and composition are two important agronomic traits for the utilization of agricultural residues. Rice (Oryza sativa) gold hull and internode phenotype is a classical morphological marker trait that has long been applied to breeding and genetics study. In this study, we have cloned the GOLD HULL AND INTERNODE2 (GH2) gene in rice using a map-based cloning approach. The result shows that the gh2 mutant is a lignin-deficient mutant, and GH2 encodes a cinnamyl-alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD). Consistent with this finding, extracts from roots, internodes, hulls, and panicles of the gh2 plants exhibited drastically reduced CAD activity and undetectable sinapyl alcohol dehydrogenase activity. When expressed in Escherichia coli, purified recombinant GH2 was found to exhibit strong catalytic ability toward coniferaldehyde and sinapaldehyde, while the mutant protein gh2 completely lost the corresponding CAD and sinapyl alcohol dehydrogenase activities. Further phenotypic analysis of the gh2 mutant plants revealed that the p-hydroxyphenyl, guaiacyl, and sinapyl monomers were reduced in almost the same ratio compared to the wild type. Our results suggest GH2 acts as a primarily multifunctional CAD to synthesize coniferyl and sinapyl alcohol precursors in rice lignin biosynthesis.


Science China-life Sciences | 2003

Map-based cloning of the ALK gene, which controls the gelatinization temperature of rice

Zhenyu Gao; Dali Zeng; Xia Cui; Yihua Zhou; Meixian Yan; Danian Huang; Jiayang Li; Qian Qian

Gelatinization temperature (GT) is an important parameter for evaluating the cooking and eating quality of rice besides amylose content (AC). The inheritance of the genes affecting GT has been widely studied and is considered to be controlled by a major gene. Here, we report the map-based cloning of rice ALK that encodes the soluble starch synthase II (SSSII). Comparison between the DNA sequences from different rice varieties, together with the results obtained with digestion of the rice seeds in alkali solution, indicates that the base substitutions in coding sequence of ALK may cause the alteration in GT.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Dissecting yield-associated loci in super hybrid rice by resequencing recombinant inbred lines and improving parental genome sequences

Zhenyu Gao; Shancen Zhao; Weiming He; Longbiao Guo; Youlin Peng; Jin-Jin Wang; Xiaosen Guo; Xuemei Zhang; Yuchun Rao; Chi Zhang; Guojun Dong; Fengya Zheng; Chang-Xin Lu; Jiang Hu; Qing Zhou; Hui-Juan Liu; Haiyang Wu; Jie Xu; Peixiang Ni; Dali Zeng; Deng-Hui Liu; Peng Tian; Li-Hui Gong; Chen Ye; Guangheng Zhang; Jian Wang; Fu-kuan Tian; Dawei Xue; Yi Liao; Li Zhu

Significance Hybrid rice developed in China has been contributing greatly to the world’s food production. The pioneer super hybrid rice developed by crossing 93–11 and Peiai 64s, Liang–You–Pei–Jiu has been widely grown in China and other Asia-Pacific regions for its high yield. Here, the quality genome sequences for both parental lines were presented and updated, and a high-resolution map of genome-wide graphic genotypes was constructed by deep resequencing a core population of 132 Liang–You–Pei–Jiu recombinant inbred lines. A series of yield-associated loci were fine-mapped, and two of them were delimited to regions each covering one candidate gene with the large recombinant inbred line population. The study provided an ideal platform for molecular breeding by quantitative trait loci cloning in rice. The growing world population and shrinkage of arable land demand yield improvement of rice, one of the most important staple crops. To elucidate the genetic basis of yield and uncover its associated loci in rice, we resequenced the core recombinant inbred lines of Liang–You–Pei–Jiu, the widely cultivated super hybrid rice, and constructed a high-resolution linkage map. We detected 43 yield-associated quantitative trait loci, of which 20 are unique. Based on the high-density physical map, the genome sequences of paternal variety 93–11 and maternal cultivar PA64s of Liang–You–Pei–Jiu were significantly improved. The large recombinant inbred line population combined with plentiful high-quality single nucleotide polymorphisms and insertions/deletions between parental genomes allowed us to fine-map two quantitative trait loci, qSN8 and qSPB1, and to identify days to heading8 and lax panicle1 as candidate genes, respectively. The quantitative trait locus qSN8 was further confirmed to be days to heading8 by a complementation test. Our study provided an ideal platform for molecular breeding by targeting and dissecting yield-associated loci in rice.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2010

Identification and characterization of NARROW AND ROLLED LEAF 1, a novel gene regulating leaf morphology and plant architecture in rice

Jiang Hu; Li Zhu; Dali Zeng; Zhenyu Gao; Longbiao Guo; Yunxia Fang; Guangheng Zhang; Guojun Dong; Meixian Yan; Jian Liu; Qian Qian

Leaf morphology is an important agronomic trait in rice breeding. We isolated three allelic mutants of NARROW AND ROLLED LEAF1 (nrl1) which showed phenotypes of reduced leaf width and semi-rolled leaves and different degrees of dwarfism. Microscopic analysis indicated that the nrl1-1 mutant had fewer longitudinal veins and smaller adaxial bulliform cells compared with the wild-type. The NRL1 gene was mapped to the chromosome 12 and encodes the cellulose synthase-like protein D4 (OsCslD4). Sequence analyses revealed single base substitutions in the three allelic mutants. Genetic complementation and over-expression of the OsCslD4 gene confirmed the identity of NRL1. The gene was expressed in all tested organs of rice at the heading stage and expression level was higher in vigorously growing organs, such as roots, sheaths and panicles than in elsewhere. In the mutant leaves, however, the expression level was lower than that in the wild-type. We conclude that OsCslD4 encoded by NRL1 plays a critical role in leaf morphogenesis and vegetative development in rice.


Euphytica | 2004

QTL analysis of leaf photosynthetic rate and related physiological traits in rice (Oryza sativa L.)

Sheng Teng; Qian Qian; Dali Zeng; Yasufumi Kunihiro; Kan Fujimoto; Danian Huang; Lihuang Zhu

Photosynthesis is the primary source ofdry matter production and grain yield inrice. Study on genetics of photosynthesisand related physiological characters isvery important to rice physiologicalbreeding. In this study, a double haploid(DH) population derived from anther cultureof ZYQ8/JX17, a typical indica and japonicahybrid was used as genetic material. Netphotosynthetic rate, chlorophyll content,stomatal resistance and transpiration rateof the parents and DH lines wereinvestigated in flourishing tilleringperiod. The quantitative trait loci (QTLs)for each trait were analyzed based on theconstructed molecular linkage map of thispopulation. A total of 8 QTLs forphotosynthesis and related physiologicalcharacters were detected. Two putative QTLsfor net photosynthetic rate (qNPR-4 andqNPR-6) were mapped on chromosome 4 and 6,respectively. Three QTLs (qCC-1, qCC-3 andqCC-8) for chlorophyll content weredetected on chromosome 1, 3 and 8,respectively. One QTL for stomatalresistance (qSR-4) was identified onchromosome 4. Two QTLs for transpirationrate (qTR-4 and qTR-7) were detected onchromosome 4 and 7, respectively. TheseQTLs should accelerate the process ofbreeding new rice varieties with higherphotosynthetic capacity and higher yield.


Plant Journal | 2010

Brittle Culm 12, a dual‐targeting kinesin‐4 protein, controls cell‐cycle progression and wall properties in rice

Mu Zhang; Baocai Zhang; Qian Qian; Yanchun Yu; Rui Li; Junwen Zhang; Xiangling Liu; Dali Zeng; Jiayang Li; Yihua Zhou

Kinesins are encoded by a large gene family involved in many basic processes of plant development. However, the number of functionally identified kinesins in rice is very limited. Here, we report the functional characterization of Brittle Culm12 (BC12), a gene encoding a kinesin-4 protein. bc12 mutants display dwarfism resulting from a significant reduction in cell number and brittleness due to an alteration in cellulose microfibril orientation and wall composition. BC12 is expressed mainly in tissues undergoing cell division and secondary wall thickening. In vitro biochemical analyses verified BC12 as an authentic motor protein. This protein was present in both the nucleus and cytoplasm and associated with microtubule arrays during cell division. Mitotic microtubule array comparison, flow cytometric analysis and expression assays of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complexes in root-tip cells showed that cell-cycle progression is affected in bc12 mutants. BC12 is very probably regulated by CDKA;3 based on yeast two-hybrid and microarray data. Therefore, BC12 functions as a dual-targeting kinesin protein and is implicated in cell-cycle progression, cellulose microfibril deposition and wall composition in the monocot plant rice.

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Jiayang Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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