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Dive into the research topics where Yuri Shavrukov is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuri Shavrukov.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

Salt stress or salt shock: which genes are we studying?

Yuri Shavrukov

Depending on the method of NaCl application, whether gradual or in a single step, plants may experience either salt stress or salt shock, respectively. The first phase of salt stress is osmotic stress. However, in the event of salt shock, plants suffer osmotic shock, leading to cell plasmolysis and leakage of osmolytes, phenomena that do not occur with osmotic stress. Patterns of gene expression are different in response to salt stress and salt shock. Salt stress initiates relatively smooth changes in gene expression in response to osmotic stress and a more pronounced change in expression of significant numbers of genes related to the ionic phase of salt stress. There is a considerable time delay between changes in expression of genes related to the osmotic and ionic phases of salt stress. In contrast, osmotic shock results in strong, rapid changes in the expression of genes with osmotic function, and fewer changes in ionic-responsive genes that occur earlier. There are very few studies in which the effects of salt stress and salt shock are described in parallel experiments. However, the patterns of changes in gene expression observed in these studies are consistently as described above, despite the use of diverse plant species. It is concluded that gene expression profiles are very different depending the method of salt application. Imposition of salt stress by gradual exposure to NaCl rather than salt shock with a single application of a high concentration of NaCl is recommended for genetic and molecular studies, because this more closely reflects natural incidences of salinity.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2014

Expression of the Arabidopsis vacuolar H⁺-pyrophosphatase gene (AVP1) improves the shoot biomass of transgenic barley and increases grain yield in a saline field

Rhiannon K. Schilling; Petra Marschner; Yuri Shavrukov; Bettina Berger; Mark Tester; Stuart J. Roy; Darren Plett

Cereal varieties with improved salinity tolerance are needed to achieve profitable grain yields in saline soils. The expression of AVP1, an Arabidopsis gene encoding a vacuolar proton pumping pyrophosphatase (H⁺-PPase), has been shown to improve the salinity tolerance of transgenic plants in greenhouse conditions. However, the potential for this gene to improve the grain yield of cereal crops in a saline field has yet to be evaluated. Recent advances in high-throughput nondestructive phenotyping technologies also offer an opportunity to quantitatively evaluate the growth of transgenic plants under abiotic stress through time. In this study, the growth of transgenic barley expressing AVP1 was evaluated under saline conditions in a pot experiment using nondestructive plant imaging and in a saline field trial. Greenhouse-grown transgenic barley expressing AVP1 produced a larger shoot biomass compared to null segregants, as determined by an increase in projected shoot area, when grown in soil with 150 mM NaCl. This increase in shoot biomass of transgenic AVP1 barley occurred from an early growth stage and also in nonsaline conditions. In a saline field, the transgenic barley expressing AVP1 also showed an increase in shoot biomass and, importantly, produced a greater grain yield per plant compared to wild-type plants. Interestingly, the expression of AVP1 did not alter barley leaf sodium concentrations in either greenhouse- or field-grown plants. This study validates our greenhouse-based experiments and indicates that transgenic barley expressing AVP1 is a promising option for increasing cereal crop productivity in saline fields.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2013

Optimization of TaDREB3 gene expression in transgenic barley using cold‐inducible promoters

Nataliya Kovalchuk; Wei Jia; Omid Eini; Sarah Morran; Tatiana Pyvovarenko; Stephen John Fletcher; Natalia Bazanova; John Harris; Kontanze Beck-Oldach; Yuri Shavrukov; Peter Langridge; Sergiy Lopato

Constitutive over-expression of the TaDREB3 gene in barley improved frost tolerance of transgenic plants at the vegetative stage of plant development, but leads to stunted phenotypes and 3- to 6-week delays in flowering compared to control plants. In this work, two cold-inducible promoters with contrasting properties, the WRKY71 gene promoter from rice and the Cor39 gene promoter from durum wheat, were applied to optimize expression of TaDREB3. The aim of the work was to increase plant frost tolerance and to decrease or prevent negative developmental phenotypes observed during constitutive expression of TaDREB3. The OsWRKY71 and TdCor39 promoters had low-to-moderate basal activity and were activated by cold treatment in leaves, stems and developing spikes of transgenic barley and rice. Expression of the TaDREB3 gene, driven by either of the tested promoters, led to a significant improvement in frost tolerance. The presence of the functional TaDREB3 protein in transgenic plants was confirmed by the detection of strong up-regulation of cold-responsive target genes. The OsWRKY71 promoter-driven TaDREB3 provides stronger activation of the same target genes than the TdCor39 promoter. Analysis of the development of transgenic plants in the absence of stress revealed small or no differences in plant characteristics and grain yield compared with wild-type plants. The WRKY71-TaDREB3 promoter-transgene combination appears to be a promising tool for the enhancement of cold and frost tolerance in crop plants but field evaluation will be needed to confirm that negative development phenotypes have been controlled.


Archive | 2012

The Use of Hydroponics in Abiotic Stress Tolerance Research

Yuri Shavrukov; Yusuf Genc; Julie Hayes

Hydroponics, the ‘water culture’ of plants, has been used in both research and commercial contexts since the 18th century. Although now used successfully on a large scale by commercial growers of fast-growing horticultural crops such as lettuce, strawberries, tomatoes, and carnations, hydroponics was initially developed as a part of early research into plant nutrition. The idea of hydroponics, its development and improvement, stimulated the interest of plant biologists, and their research provided useful outcomes and scientific knowledge about mechanisms of nutritional toxicity/deficiency and plant development in general. Scientists discovered that plants required only a small number of inorganic elements, in addition to water, oxygen and sunlight, to grow. It was later realised that plants grew better hydroponically if the solutions were aerated. The use of hydroponics enabled plant scientists to identify which elements were essential to plants, in what ionic forms, and what the optimal concentrations of these elements were. It allowed them to easily observe the effects of elemental deficiencies and toxicities and to study other aspects of plant development under more controlled conditions. As scientists’ understanding of the requirements for growing plants in hydroponics increased, the system was adopted and refined by commercial producers who found it allowed them to control environmental variables and deliver higher yields of product more reliably. Hydroponics systems are now operated in temperatureand light-controlled glasshouses which allow crop production through all seasons.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

The TaDREB3 transgene transferred by conventional crossings to different genetic backgrounds of bread wheat improves drought tolerance

Yuri Shavrukov; Manahil Baho; Sergiy Lopato; Peter Langridge

Drought tolerance of the wheat cultivar Bobwhite was previously enhanced by transformation with a construct containing the wheat DREB3 gene driven by the stress-inducible maize Rab17 promoter. Progeny of a single T2 transgenic line were used as pollinators in crosses with four elite bread wheat cultivars from Western Australia: Bonnie Rock, IGW-2971, Magenta and Wyalkatchem, with the aim of evaluating transgene performance in different genetic backgrounds. The selected pollinator line, BW8-9-10-3, contained multiple transgene copies, had significantly improved drought tolerance compared with wild-type plants and showed no growth and development penalties or abnormalities. A single hybrid plant was selected from each cross-combination for three rounds of backcrossing with the corresponding maternal wheat cultivar. The transgene was detected in all four F1 BC3 combinations, but stress-inducible transgene expression was found in only three of the four combinations. Under well-watered conditions, the phenotypes and grain yield components of the F2 BC3 transgene-expressing lines were similar to those of corresponding recurrent parents and null-segregants. Under severe drought conditions, the backcross lines demonstrated 12-18% higher survival rates than the corresponding control plants. Two from four F3 BC3 transgenic lines showed significantly higher yield (18.9% and 21.5%) than control plants under limited water conditions. There was no induction of transgene expression under cold stress, and therefore, no improvement of frost tolerance observed in the progenies of drought-tolerant F3 BC3 lines.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Constitutive overexpression of the TaNF-YB4 gene in transgenic wheat significantly improves grain yield

Dinesh Yadav; Yuri Shavrukov; Natalia Bazanova; Larissa Chirkova; Nikolai Borisjuk; Nataliya Kovalchuk; Ainur Ismagul; Boris Parent; Peter Langridge; Maria Hrmova; Sergiy Lopato

Highlight Constitutive overexpression of NF-YB in transgenic wheat leads to a 20–30% increase in grain yield compared with wild-type plants (cv. Gladius) without negative changes in seed size or number.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016

Good and bad protons: genetic aspects of acidity stress responses in plants

Yuri Shavrukov; Yoshihiko Hirai

Physiological aspects of acidity stress in plants (synonymous with H(+) rhizotoxicity or low-pH stress) have long been a focus of research, in particular with respect to acidic soils where aluminium and H(+) rhizotoxicities often co-occur. However, toxic H(+) and Al(3+) elicit different response mechanisms in plants, and it is important to consider their effects separately. The primary aim of this review was to provide the current state of knowledge regarding the genetics of the specific reactions to low-pH stress in growing plants. A comparison of the results gleaned from quantitative trait loci analysis and global transcriptome profiling of plants in response to high proton concentrations revealed a two-stage genetic response: (i) in the short-term, proton pump H(+)-ATPases present the first barrier in root cells, allocating an excess of H(+) into either the apoplast or vacuole; the ensuing defence signaling system involves auxin, salicylic acid, and methyl jasmonate, which subsequently initiate expression of STOP and DREB transcription factors as well as chaperone ROF; (2) the long-term response includes other genes, such as alternative oxidase and type II NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, which act to detoxify dangerous reactive oxygen species in mitochondria, and help plants better manage the stress. A range of transporter genes including those for nitrate (NTR1), malate (ALMT1), and heavy metals are often up-regulated by H(+) rhizotoxicity. Expansins, cell-wall-related genes, the γ-aminobutyric acid shunt and biochemical pH-stat genes also reflect changes in cell metabolism and biochemistry in acidic conditions. However, the genetics underlying the acidity stress response of plants is complicated and only fragmentally understood.


BMC Plant Biology | 2016

Comparison of SNP and CAPS markers application in genetic research in wheat and barley

Yuri Shavrukov

BackgroundBarley and bread wheat show large differences in frequencies of Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) as determined from genome-wide studies. These frequencies have been estimated as 2.4-3 times higher in the entire barley genome than within each diploid genomes of wheat (A, B or D). However, barley SNPs within individual genes occur significantly more frequently than quoted. Differences between wheat and barley are based on the origin and evolutionary history of the species. Bread wheat contains rarer SNPs due to the double genetic ‘bottle-neck’ created by natural hybridisation and spontaneous polyploidisation. Furthermore, wheat has the lowest level of useful SNP-derived markers while barley is estimated to have the highest level of polymorphism.ResultsDifferent strategies are required for the development of suitable molecular markers in these cereal species. For example, SNP markers based on high-throughput technology (Infinium or KASP) are very effective and useful in both barley and bread wheat. In contrast, Cleaved Amplified Polymorphic Sequences (CAPS) are more widely and successfully employed in small-scale experiments with highly polymorphic genetic regions containing multiple SNPs in barley, but not in wheat. However, preliminary ‘in silico’ search databases for assessing the potential value of SNPs have yet to be developed.ConclusionsThis mini-review summarises results supporting the development of different strategies for the application of effective SNP and CAPS markers in wheat and barley.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Early Flowering as a Drought Escape Mechanism in Plants: How Can It Aid Wheat Production?

Yuri Shavrukov; Akhylbek Kurishbayev; Satyvaldy Jatayev; Vladimir Shvidchenko; Lyudmila Zotova; Francois Koekemoer; Stephan de Groot; Kathleen L. Soole; Peter Langridge

Drought escape (DE) is a classical adaptive mechanism which involves rapid plant development to enable the completion of the full life-cycle prior to a coming drought event. This strategy is widely used in populations of native plants, and is also applicable to cereal crops such as wheat. Early flowering time and a shorter vegetative phase can be very important for wheat production in conditions of terminal drought since this can minimize exposure to dehydration during the sensitive flowering and post-anthesis grain filling periods. A gradual shift toward early flowering has been observed over the last century of wheat breeding in countries with a Mediterranean-type climate and frequent terminal drought. This trend is predicted to continue for wheat production in the coming years in response to global climate warming. The advantage of early flowering wheat is apparent under conditions of impending terminal drought, and modern varieties are significantly more productive due to minimization of the risk associated with drought stress. Under favorable conditions, a short vegetative phase can result in reduced plant biomass due to the reduction in time available for photosynthetic production and seed nutrient accumulation. However, high yield potential has been reported for the development of both shallow and deep roots, representing plasticity in response to drought in combination with the early flowering trait. Wheat productivity can be high both in well-watered and drought-affected field trials, where an efficient strategy of DE was associated with quick growth, yield potential and water use efficiency. Therefore, early flowering provides a promising strategy for the production of advanced drought-adapted wheat cultivars.


New Phytologist | 2016

The homeodomain transcription factor TaHDZipI‐2 from wheat regulates frost tolerance, flowering time and spike development in transgenic barley

Nataliya Kovalchuk; William Chew; Pradeep Sornaraj; Nikolai Borisjuk; Nannan Yang; Rohan Singh; Natalia Bazanova; Yuri Shavrukov; André Guendel; Eberhard Munz; Ljudmilla Borisjuk; Peter Langridge; Maria Hrmova; Sergiy Lopato

Homeodomain leucine zipper class I (HD-Zip I) transcription factors (TFs) play key roles in the regulation of plant growth and development under stresses. Functions of the TaHDZipI-2 gene isolated from the endosperm of developing wheat grain were revealed. Molecular characterization of TaHDZipI-2 protein included studies of its dimerisation, protein-DNA interactions and gene activation properties using pull-down assays, in-yeast methods and transient expression assays in wheat cells. The analysis of TaHDZipI-2 gene functions was performed using transgenic barley plants. It included comparison of developmental phenotypes, yield components, grain quality, frost tolerance and the levels of expression of potential target genes in transgenic and control plants. Transgenic TaHDZipI-2 lines showed characteristic phenotypic features that included reduced growth rates, reduced biomass, early flowering, light-coloured leaves and narrowly elongated spikes. Transgenic lines produced 25-40% more seeds per spike than control plants, but with 50-60% smaller grain size. In vivo lipid imaging exposed changes in the distribution of lipids between the embryo and endosperm in transgenic seeds. Transgenic lines were significantly more tolerant to frost than control plants. Our data suggest the role of TaHDZipI-2 in controlling several key processes underlying frost tolerance, transition to flowering and spike development.

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Mark Tester

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Sergiy Lopato

Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics

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Natalia Bazanova

Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics

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Nataliya Kovalchuk

Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics

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