Literature DB >> 23213200

A conserved molecular basis for photoperiod adaptation in two temperate legumes.

James L Weller1, Lim Chee Liew, Valérie F G Hecht, Vinodan Rajandran, Rebecca E Laurie, Stephen Ridge, Bénédicte Wenden, Jacqueline K Vander Schoor, Odile Jaminon, Christelle Blassiau, Marion Dalmais, Catherine Rameau, Abdelhafid Bendahmane, Richard C Macknight, Isabelle Lejeune-Hénaut.   

Abstract

Legumes were among the first plant species to be domesticated, and accompanied cereals in expansion of agriculture from the Fertile Crescent into diverse environments across the Mediterranean basin, Europe, Central Asia, and the Indian subcontinent. Although several recent studies have outlined the molecular basis for domestication and eco-geographic adaptation in the two main cereals from this region, wheat and barley, similar questions remain largely unexplored in their legume counterparts. Here we identify two major loci controlling differences in photoperiod response between wild and domesticated pea, and show that one of these, high response to photoperiod (HR), is an ortholog of early flowering 3 (ELF3), a gene involved in circadian clock function. We found that a significant proportion of flowering time variation in global pea germplasm is controlled by HR, with a single, widespread functional variant conferring altered circadian rhythms and the reduced photoperiod response associated with the spring habit. We also present evidence that ELF3 has a similar role in lentil, another major legume crop, with a distinct functional variant contributing to reduced photoperiod response in cultivars widely deployed in short-season environments. Our results identify the factor likely to have permitted the successful prehistoric expansion of legume cultivation to Northern Europe, and define a conserved genetic basis for major adaptive changes in flowering phenology and growth habit in an important crop group.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23213200      PMCID: PMC3529011          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1207943110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  31 in total

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8.  The Chickpea Early Flowering 1 (Efl1) Locus Is an Ortholog of Arabidopsis ELF3.

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9.  EARLY FLOWERING3 Regulates Flowering in Spring Barley by Mediating Gibberellin Production and FLOWERING LOCUS T Expression.

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10.  Identification of LATE BLOOMER2 as a CYCLING DOF FACTOR Homolog Reveals Conserved and Divergent Features of the Flowering Response to Photoperiod in Pea.

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