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Volume 8 Issue 11, November 2022

Digging for weevil resistance in sweet potato variety

Sweet potato weevils are a major crop pest, causing substantial economic and environmental harm in the tropics and subtropics. Identifying genes conveying resistance to weevils, such as SPWR1 and SPWR2, is a route to eco-friendly pest management.

See Liu, et al.

Image: Guoguo Mei. Cover Design: Erin Dewalt.

Editorial

  • It’s time once more for the announcement of the winners of the Nobel Prizes, which again fail to include any researchers who work on plants. However, that does not mean to say that the prizes have no relevance to plant biologists.

    Editorial

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Comment & Opinion

  • At a time when food security is being threatened by climate change and population growth, regulatory systems must be designed to encourage innovation through all available technological means. Proposed changes to the concept of essential derivation will classify all mono-parental varieties as essentially derived, threatening the use of new breeding technologies to deliver crop improvement.

    • Hamish MacDonald
    • Robert J. Henry
    Comment
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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • Nitrate is a nutrient and a signal. Membrane protein NRT1.1 reflects this duality as both a nitrate transporter and sensor. A new perception mechanism has just been discovered: transcription factor NLP7 is also a nitrate sensor. Thus, two distinct but interacting systems perceive nitrate. Are there others?

    • Jordan Courrèges-Clercq
    • Gabriel Krouk
    News & Views
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Research Briefings

  • Root hairs have long been considered to elongate exclusively by so-called tip growth, in which the new building material is deposited at the root hair apex. Using a set of newly developed imaging experiments, we revealed that root hair shank expansion can substantially contribute to total root hair growth.

    Research Briefing
  • Guard cell outward rectifying potassium (GORK) channel activity is associated with channel clustering at the guard cell membrane. We show that clustering and gating both depend on an extended ‘antenna’ of bound channel voltage sensors. Uncoupling clustering and gating facilitates K+ flux, accelerating stomatal movements in environments typical for plants in the field.

    Research Briefing
  • Duplication of KCBP, which encodes a plant-specific microtubule-based kinesin motor, occurs solely in legumes of the clade that form symbiosomes. The nodule-enriched KCBP (nKCBP) is co-opted by rhizobia to control central vacuole morphogenesis in symbiotic cells, thus achieving symbiosome development and nitrogen fixation.

    Research Briefing
  • Plant cell wall pectin has a homogalacturonan or rhamnogalacturonan backbone. Incomplete knowledge of RG-I biosynthetic enzymes has impeded in vitro pectin synthesis and pectin structure and function studies. Here, RGGAT1 is identified as a GT116 RG-I backbone biosynthetic galacturonosyltransferase that produces polymeric RG-I backbone when expressed with GT106 RG-I rhamnosyltransferases.

    Research Briefing
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