Twisted Sister1 : an agravitropic mutant of bread wheat ( Triticum aestivum ) with altered root and shoot architectures
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We identified a mutant of hexaploid wheat ( Triticum aestivum ) with impaired responses to gravity. The mutant, named Twisted Sister1 ( TS1 ), had agravitropic roots that were often twisted along with altered shoot phenotypes. Roots of TS1 were insensitive to externally applied auxin, with the genetics and physiology suggestive of a mutated AUX/IAA transcription factor gene. Hexaploid wheat possesses over 80 AUX/IAA genes, and sequence information did not identify an obvious candidate. Bulked segregant analysis of an F 2 population mapped the mutation to chromosome 5A, and subsequent mapping located the mutation to a 41 Mbp region. RNA‐seq identified the TraesCS5A03G0149800 gene encoding a TaAUX/IAA protein to be mutated in the highly conserved domain II motif. We confirmed TraesCS5A03G0149800 as underlying the mutant phenotype by generating transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana . Analysis of RNA‐seq data suggested broad similarities between Arabidopsis and wheat for the role of AUX/IAA genes in gravity responses, although there were marked differences. Here we show that the sequenced wheat genome, along with previous knowledge of the physiology of gravity responses from other plant species, gene mapping, RNA‐seq, and expression in Arabidopsis have enabled the cloning of a key wheat gene that defines plant architecture.