Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification

Plants require at least 14 essential mineral nutrients in order to successfully complete their life cycle. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are required in particularly large quantities, and there is an ever increasing demand for fertiliser inputs to maintain adequate concentrations in crops. Huma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alcock, Thomas David
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55892/
_version_ 1848799234503999488
author Alcock, Thomas David
author_facet Alcock, Thomas David
author_sort Alcock, Thomas David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Plants require at least 14 essential mineral nutrients in order to successfully complete their life cycle. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are required in particularly large quantities, and there is an ever increasing demand for fertiliser inputs to maintain adequate concentrations in crops. Humans are made up of at least 35 mineral nutrients, most of which originate from the ingestion of plant material. It is likely that much of the world’s population consumes insufficient quantities of numerous mineral nutrients, including calcium and magnesium. Variation in nutrient concentration traits in a diversity population of Brassica napus was characterised. Leaf nitrate, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium data, along with markers developed through transcriptome sequencing, were subsequently used to determine associated quantitative trait loci. Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica genotypes mutated in selected candidate genes were characterised for nutrient concentration traits. An additional, EMS mutagenesis-background genotype, previously shown to accumulate magnesium, was also investigated. Both physiological and genetic bases of the trait were considered, including through leaf spatial-distribution mapping of mineral elements, and analysis of bulked-segregant DNA sequence data. Associative transcriptomics analyses identified numerous genetic loci and allelic variants for all traits investigated which may prove useful in marker-assisted selection strategies. Plants mutated in several calcium and magnesium accumulation candidate genes also have perturbed nutrient profiles. Characterisation of unique physiological traits in the magnesium accumulator mutant indicated drastic changes in tissue and cellular distribution of magnesium and phosphorus. Findings from this and other characterisation experiments enabled the identification of relatively few candidate genetic polymorphisms from DNA sequence data. This thesis has identified a number of new targets for controlling nutrient accumulation in Brassica spp. This knowledge could be applied in the development of novel crop varieties with greater nutrient-use efficiency and accumulation traits in order to decrease crop fertiliser requirements and reduce widespread human undernutrition.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:32:26Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-55892
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:32:26Z
publishDate 2019
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-558922025-02-28T14:21:43Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55892/ Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification Alcock, Thomas David Plants require at least 14 essential mineral nutrients in order to successfully complete their life cycle. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are required in particularly large quantities, and there is an ever increasing demand for fertiliser inputs to maintain adequate concentrations in crops. Humans are made up of at least 35 mineral nutrients, most of which originate from the ingestion of plant material. It is likely that much of the world’s population consumes insufficient quantities of numerous mineral nutrients, including calcium and magnesium. Variation in nutrient concentration traits in a diversity population of Brassica napus was characterised. Leaf nitrate, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium data, along with markers developed through transcriptome sequencing, were subsequently used to determine associated quantitative trait loci. Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica genotypes mutated in selected candidate genes were characterised for nutrient concentration traits. An additional, EMS mutagenesis-background genotype, previously shown to accumulate magnesium, was also investigated. Both physiological and genetic bases of the trait were considered, including through leaf spatial-distribution mapping of mineral elements, and analysis of bulked-segregant DNA sequence data. Associative transcriptomics analyses identified numerous genetic loci and allelic variants for all traits investigated which may prove useful in marker-assisted selection strategies. Plants mutated in several calcium and magnesium accumulation candidate genes also have perturbed nutrient profiles. Characterisation of unique physiological traits in the magnesium accumulator mutant indicated drastic changes in tissue and cellular distribution of magnesium and phosphorus. Findings from this and other characterisation experiments enabled the identification of relatively few candidate genetic polymorphisms from DNA sequence data. This thesis has identified a number of new targets for controlling nutrient accumulation in Brassica spp. This knowledge could be applied in the development of novel crop varieties with greater nutrient-use efficiency and accumulation traits in order to decrease crop fertiliser requirements and reduce widespread human undernutrition. 2019-07-17 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55892/1/T.Alcock%20full%20thesis%20w%20corrections%2010-01-19.pdf Alcock, Thomas David (2019) Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. plant nutrients canola ionomics mineral concentration high-throughput phenotyping biofortification associative transcriptomics GWAS Brassica nitrogen phosphorus potassium calcium magnesium diversity population EMS TILLING
spellingShingle plant nutrients
canola
ionomics
mineral concentration
high-throughput phenotyping
biofortification
associative transcriptomics
GWAS
Brassica
nitrogen
phosphorus
potassium
calcium
magnesium
diversity population
EMS
TILLING
Alcock, Thomas David
Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title_full Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title_fullStr Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title_full_unstemmed Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title_short Nutrient accumulation in Brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
title_sort nutrient accumulation in brassica: identification of new targets for crop improvement and biofortification
topic plant nutrients
canola
ionomics
mineral concentration
high-throughput phenotyping
biofortification
associative transcriptomics
GWAS
Brassica
nitrogen
phosphorus
potassium
calcium
magnesium
diversity population
EMS
TILLING
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55892/