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The GATA5-GhFBA1_At-KNAT7 module regulates fruit branch angle and high-density yield by controlling cell expansion and cell wall thickness in cotton.

Xu Z, Fu C, Le Y, Chen M, Li Y

Crispr

Cotton fields packed tighter together can yield more fiber per acre without clearing new land — and the same gene-editing logic could eventually be applied to reshape the architecture of other crops crowding out your raised beds.

Cotton plants normally spread their branches outward at wide angles, which limits how close together farmers can plant them. Researchers found a single gene that controls this branch angle — when the gene is active, branches spread wide and cell walls stay thin and flexible; when it's turned off, the plant grows more upright and compact. By using a precise gene-editing tool to switch off this gene, they grew denser cotton fields with better overall yields.

Key Findings

1

A major genetic region (qFBA-A11) controlling fruit branch angle was mapped in cotton, and the responsible gene GhFBA1_At was identified through positional cloning

2

GhFBA1_At promotes wide branch angles by inhibiting a protein called KNAT7, which reduces cell wall thickness and weakens mechanical support in branch tissue

3

CRISPR-Cas9 knockout of GhFBA1_At produced compact plant architecture and measurably higher cotton yield under high-density planting conditions

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists discovered a gene in cotton that controls how wide the branches spread outward from the plant. By editing this gene with CRISPR, they created more compact cotton plants that produce higher yields when grown in dense plantings.

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Abstract Preview

Enhancing cotton yield remains a paramount breeding objective. Given limited arable land, increasing planting density is an effective strategy to boost cotton yield. However, the genetic basis of p...

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Cotton crispr, crop-improvement, plant-architecture +2 more 5 related articles

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