Engineering crop determinacy: CRISPR/Cas based advances in self-pruning gene function and application.
Rajan A, Raveendran M, Shanmugam V, Arul L, Kumar KK
Crispr
The bushy, vining tomato taking over your raised bed every August exists because of one ancient gene mutation — and researchers can now dial that same 'stop growing, start fruiting' switch into almost any crop, which could mean shorter-season varieties bred for your climate reaching backyard seed catalogs sooner.
Plants can grow in two modes: keep-going (indeterminate) or stop-and-fruit (determinate). A single gene acts like a timer that tells the plant when to switch. Scientists have figured out how to use a precise molecular tool — CRISPR — to flip that timer in crops like tomatoes, beans, cotton, and grains, making plants that produce all their fruit at once instead of trickling it out over months. This is especially useful where harvesting by hand is getting harder or more expensive.
Key Findings
CRISPR editing of the SELF-PRUNING (SP) / TFL1 gene family successfully converted indeterminate growth to compact, determinate forms across tomato, legumes, cotton, cereals, and horticultural crops.
Determinate growth engineering synchronizes flowering and fruit set, directly enabling mechanical harvesting and reducing labor costs at scale.
Hormonal pathways — specifically auxin and cytokinin — interact with SP/TFL1 genes to regulate the vegetative-to-reproductive transition, offering additional editing targets for fine-tuning plant architecture.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists are using CRISPR gene editing to switch crops from sprawling, open-ended growth to compact, synchronized plants that flower and ripen all at once — making them far easier to harvest by machine. The key target is a gene called SELF-PRUNING, already known from the compact tomato varieties used in commercial processing.
Abstract Preview
The transition from indeterminate to determinate growth represents a key achievement in crop improvement, as it enhances agricultural productivity by synchronizing flowering, facilitating uniform h...
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