Organic Farming MagOrganic Farming Mag
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Machinery
  • Crops
  • Farm Management
  • Markets
  • Technology
  • Weather

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news about farming and agriculture business

What's Hot

Markets in Minutes: Top Third looks ahead for week of March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023

Limits on foreign ownership of U.S. farmland gain support in Congress, despite skepticism

March 20, 2023

Grains in the red | Monday, March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Markets in Minutes: Top Third looks ahead for week of March 20, 2023
  • Limits on foreign ownership of U.S. farmland gain support in Congress, despite skepticism
  • Grains in the red | Monday, March 20, 2023
  • Late-model used planter supplies improve
  • Soybeans close at lowest price since December | Friday, March 17, 2023
  • Senator warns of farm-size conflict in farm bill negotiations
  • Setting sell targets: creating your own luck
  • Soy checkoff founder receives inaugural United Soybean Board award
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
Organic Farming MagOrganic Farming Mag
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Machinery
  • Crops
  • Farm Management
  • Markets
  • Technology
  • Weather
Organic Farming MagOrganic Farming Mag
Home » Gene discovery could protect sorghum against anthracnose

Gene discovery could protect sorghum against anthracnose

February 2, 20233 Mins Read Crops
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
A gene discovered by a scientific team from the Agricultural Research Service and Purdue University could help fortify the defenses of sorghum to anthracnose, a disease of the cereal grain crop that can inflict yield losses of up to 50 percent.
The discovery, to be reported in an upcoming issue of The Plant Journal, opens the door to breeding disease-resistant sorghum cultivars that are less reliant on fungicides to protect them, reducing growers’ production costs, and safeguarding grain yields and quality, among other benefits.
Sorghum is the fifth-most widely grown cereal grain crop worldwide, providing consumers not only with a source of food containing 12 essential nutrients, but also forage for livestock and material for bio-based energy. However, unchecked with fungicides or other measures, anthracnose will attack all parts of a susceptible cultivar, often forming reddish lesions on leaves and the stem as well as causing damage to the plant’s panicles and grain heads.
Genetic-based disease resistance is the most effective and sustainable approach to combating anthracnose in sorghum. However, how this resistance actually works in the plant is poorly understood, according to Matthew Helm, a research molecular biologist at ARS’s Crop Production and Pest Control Research Unit in West Lafayette, Indiana. That knowledge gap is worrisome because of the genetic variability among different races (or types) of the anthracnose fungus and their potential to overcome a cultivar’s resistance genes over time. Additionally, anthracnose resistance can be temperature-dependent, potentially leaving a sorghum crop vulnerable to infection if temperatures soar above a certain threshold.

Fortunately, Helm and a team of Purdue University scientists led by Demeke Mewa have begun to close this gap. They identified a disease-resistance gene that orchestrates a series of defense responses to early infection by the anthracnose fungus, preventing its spread to the rest of the plant and grain heads.
Additionally, sorghum plants carrying the resistance gene, known as “ANTHRACNOSE RESISTANCE GENE 2” (ARG2), successfully withstood the fungus even when greenhouse temperatures were increased to 100 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature stability could be a potential boon for sorghum production regions of the world where growing season temperatures can reach those levels.
The team also determined that ARG2 helps make (or “encodes for”) a protein that is concentrated in the plasma membrane of resistant sorghum cells. There, it acts as a kind of intruder alert that’s triggered by certain proteins used by the anthracnose fungus to infect the plant.
“These results significantly advance our understanding of how sorghum detects fungal pathogens and opens the door for engineering new disease resistances against plant pathogens of cereal grains,” the team writes in an abstract summarizing their findings in The Plant Journal paper.
ARG2 and its protein don’t protect sorghum from all races of anthracnose. However, combining ARG2 with other similar genes could help broaden that protection — either through conventional plant breeding methods or biotechnological ones. With ARG2’s discovery, scientists now have a key to unlocking a fuller understanding of how the mechanisms of anthracnose resistance work and making the best use of them as a disease defense that growers worldwide can count on.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Perspective: The pressure on pollinator insects

March 16, 2023

National Equal Pay Day: Pay gaps linger in the agriculture industry

March 14, 2023

American Farmland Trust awards over $1M in ag microgrants

March 13, 2023

Markets in Minutes: Top Third looks ahead for week of March 13, 2023

March 13, 2023

Farmer confidence in exports falls as February sentiments decline

March 8, 2023

Improving crop safety in soybeans is vital weed deterrent

March 7, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Our Picks

Markets in Minutes: Top Third looks ahead for week of March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023

Limits on foreign ownership of U.S. farmland gain support in Congress, despite skepticism

March 20, 2023

Grains in the red | Monday, March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023

Late-model used planter supplies improve

March 20, 2023
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Markets

Setting sell targets: creating your own luck

By adminMarch 17, 20230

Can you create your own luck? How many times have you told yourself you were…

Soy checkoff founder receives inaugural United Soybean Board award

March 17, 2023

Genesis: How Ford got out of the tractor business in grand style

March 17, 2023

Pipeline permit hearing will be held during harvest

March 17, 2023

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news about farming and agriculture business

About Us
About Us

Organic Farming Magazine also know as Agriculture Fertilizer Farm is one of the most trusted news source about farming and agriculture all around the world, follow us to get the latest news, updates and tips about farming.

Our Picks

Markets in Minutes: Top Third looks ahead for week of March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023

Limits on foreign ownership of U.S. farmland gain support in Congress, despite skepticism

March 20, 2023

Grains in the red | Monday, March 20, 2023

March 20, 2023
Breaking Now

Corn up 2¢, soy and wheat in the red | Thursday, March 16, 2023

March 16, 2023

Perspective: The pressure on pollinator insects

March 16, 2023

Eazr, Mumbai-based Fintech Raises Seed Funding Round

March 16, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2023 Organic Farming Magazine. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.