Controlling dormancy and sprouting in potato and onion

Lead Research Organisation: University of Greenwich
Department Name: Natural Resources Institute, FES

Abstract

Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

Technical Summary

This science-led project addresses a major commercial problem in potato and onion industries, namely loss of crop value and quality due to untimely postharvest sprouting from tubers and bulbs. Chemical controls are widely deployed but many of these may be withdrawn and others are not universally effective. Alternative routes to preventing sprouting are therefore urgently needed. Duration of meristem endodormancy and subsequent rate of sprout extension are key traits for which substantial genotypic variation exists, and some of this has been associated with QTLs in potato. However, the underlying genes are not yet defined, nor is the substantial influence of pre- and post-harvest environment fully understood.

We have therefore assembled a team with complementary expertise across genetics, molecular biology, physiology and storage of both species. We will take advantage of unique potato genetic resources, especially substantial mapping populations with diversity in dormancy, and the recent availability of a high quality genome sequence. Onion genomics are much less advanced, but we will access the latest resources and generate novel RNAseq data. This will allow innovative species and genotype comparisons

Our starting point is a working model of hormone signalling in regulation of dormancy and post-dormancy growth; this is based on our data for cytokinins, strigolactones, ethylene and ABA. We will advance and test this model by sampling extreme genotypes from both narrow genetic bases (individuals from mapping populations) and broader potato and onion diversity. By accurately defining duration of endodormancy and tracing transcript and hormone profiles in tuber and meristem tissues throughout crop development and post-harvest storage, we will extract the strongest variables that robustly correlate with, predict and/or regulate dormancy status. Close alignment with industry will enable translation and further testing of models under commercial conditions.

Planned Impact

Who might benefit from this research?
This proposal has been developed in consultation with key UK industrial beneficiaries. Enhanced knowledge and tools relating to potato storage will benefit all industry sectors, reflected by the financial support of the Potato Council, who include this topic as a priority area in their R&D strategy. Direct beneficiaries include PepsiCo PLC, a global company with substantial activity in the UK processing potato market, and Albert Bartlett, UK's leading grower and packer of potatoes (25% market share of UK fresh & seed potato production) Collectively the levy board and industrial partners have committed significant funding to the project (10% cash).

Ultimately project outcomes will impact on sustainable food production. UK food self-sufficiency will result in reduced imports and costs to consumers. In the global economy, improved human nutrition anywhere will improve global security and thereby benefit the UK. Outcomes of this research will also impact on breeding in developing countries. For example the International Potato Centre (CIP) operates several breeding programmes for Asia and Africa, where crop storage facilities are limited. A unified model of dormancy control across crops included here will provide impetus for research on less studied staples (yam, sweet potato) vital for food security in some of world's poorest regions.

How might they benefit from this research?
Currently in the UK, storage waste for potatoes and onions is between 3-25%. Much of this waste is related to breaking of endormancy and premature sprouting. Chemical inhibitors of sprouting (e.g. chlorpropham (CIPC) and maleic hydrazide (MH)) are UK industry standards; however they are under severe threat of being withdrawn under EU regulation, since they are increasingly considered undesirable by consumers and regulators. Currently, of the 4.05 million tonnes of potatoes stored annually in the UK, 44% is treated with CIPC, so there is an urgent need to develop new storage strategies for potato and onion, less reliant on CIPC (please see letter of support from CIPC stewardship group). This new consortium will employ cutting-edge technologies to develop genetic, molecular, biochemical markers in potato and onion for evaluation of dormancy status in existing and emerging cultivars and to understand the impact of agronomic/storage practices on the development of dormancy.

For onion, our proposed research and assemblies will feed directly into the current international efforts on transcriptome analysis for onion and other alliums. With the assistance of Prof. Havey of the University of Wisconsin we will ensure that we integrate and make public onion transcriptome data.

Longer term, plant breeding is the route through which almost all genetic advances in crop production will benefit the wider community. The commercial arm of JHI, Mylnefield Research Services, runs potato breeding programmes for all major UK potato producers, enabling ready routes to translate research outcomes to industry.

Wide dissemination will ensure full benefit of project outcomes. Participation of the Potato Council in the consortium is pivotal through its links across the UK potato industry. The Potato Council will also provide feedback from industry on the project and the uptake of its outcomes. Similarly, established links between CU and the British Onion Producers Association will provide a route to interaction with the onion industry.

NRI-UoG works closely with international research organisations including CGIAR centres such as CIP, IITA and CIAT to support research on root crops in order to improve food security worldwide. It is therefore well placed to ensure that project outputs are fully exploited through breeding and technology development to improve storage and reduce losses for potato, onion and other root crops.
 
Description A number of QTL's were identified for dormancy break and sprout growth in a dipliod potato family. This work will have value to breeders and geneticist developing durable markers for diploid and tetraploid lines with enhance dormancy charachteristics and reduced sprout vigour
Exploitation Route The modelling in sprout growth kinetics has been used to model sprout growth in commercial lines for an AHDB potato project
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink

 
Description Work on dormancy phenotyping models is being used by industry (AHDB-Potato) to help to charachterise commercial varieties currently being stored in the UK so that a new dormancy ranking can be provided to the industry. This will help growers to plan sprout suppressant treatments and the grouping of varieties that can be stored together.
First Year Of Impact 2018
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink
Impact Types Economic

 
Description I am a member of the AHDB-Potato led Chlorpropham (or CIPC)- stewardship scheme- helping the potato industry manage the application of the potato sprout suppressant-CIPC '
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Membership of a guideline committee
 
Description Potato Council- AHDB Studentship scheme 2012/2013
Amount £69,000 (GBP)
Funding ID 180614-PCL 
Organisation Agricultural and Horticulture Development Board 
Department Potato Council
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2013 
End 10/2016
 
Title Production of growth kinetic models for capturing growth rates of potato sprouts 
Description Development of modified gompertz growth kinetic models for capturing the length of potato dormancy and the initial phase of sprout growth vigour that provided metrics for QTL analysis 
Type Of Material Physiological assessment or outcome measure 
Year Produced 2014 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Provides a tangiable scoring measurement to improve the way potato phenotyping data on dormancy break can be analysed and fed into QTL analysis 
 
Title Generating growth rate kinetic models for potato dormancy break and sprout growth 
Description Development of modified gompertz growth rate models for capturing the length of dormancy and the vigour of sprout growth used to provide metrics for QTL analysis in a diploid population of potato during storage 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2014 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This model along with a modified brocken-stick model were used to capture changes in dormancy and sprout vigour patterns in a large number (2500 potato) progeny and provide improved metrics to fine tune QTL analysis for dormany break in diploid potato lines 
 
Description Hazel Technologies 
Organisation Hazel Technologies
Country United States 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution We have been working with Hazel Technologies trialing a new sprout suppressant formulation
Collaborator Contribution They have been provinding products and different formulations of sprout suppressants
Impact Private commercially sensitive reports
Start Year 2021
 
Description Hazel Technologies 
Organisation Hazel Technologies
Country United States 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution We have been working with Hazel Technologies trialing a new sprout suppressant formulation
Collaborator Contribution They have been provinding products and different formulations of sprout suppressants
Impact Private commercially sensitive reports
Start Year 2021
 
Description Control of sprouting in processing potato 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact International potato storage conference (Storage 20 20) organised by AHDB-Potato Council, watched by 200-300 growers, advisors, Agronomist, members of industries that support the growing, storage and processing of potato, retail sector and funding agencies

A number of members of the agrochemical/ potato processing industry have followed up the talk with additional discussions.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description European Potato Research Association- Post-Harvest Conference -Wageningen- The Netherlands 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Attendance at the EAPR conference on post-harvest potato research. I presented work across a number of research projects on mechanisms to control dormancy break in potato- including some of the work on the currently funded BBSRC funded project on controlling dormancy in potato and onion.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
URL http://www.eapr-postharvest.eu/programme/
 
Description On-line conference paper on current sprout control strategies for UK potatoes 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact On line lecture for Cambridge University Potato Growers Association research event- 100-150 growers, agronomists and fellow scientists workin in potato agronomy and storage. The Paper was present in collaboration with Sutton Bridge Crop Storage Centre
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020