| Literature DB >> 28244155 |
Faqiang Wu1, Eric J Sedivy1, William Brian Price1, Waseem Haider1, Yoshie Hanzawa1.
Abstract
To clarify the molecular bases of flowering time evolution in crop domestication, here we investigate the evolutionary fates of a set of four recently duplicated genes in soybean: FT2a, FT2b, FT2c and FT2d that are homologues of the floral inducer FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT). While FT2a maintained the flowering inducer function, other genes went through contrasting evolutionary paths. FT2b evolved attenuated expression potentially associated with a transposon insertion in the upstream intergenic region, while FT2c and FT2d obtained a transposon insertion and structural rearrangement, respectively. In contrast to FT2b and FT2d whose mutational events occurred before the separation of G. max and G. soja, the evolution of FT2c is a G. max lineage specific event. The FT2c allele carrying a transposon insertion is nearly fixed in soybean landraces and differentiates domesticated soybean from wild soybean, indicating that this allele spread at the early stage of soybean domestication. The domesticated allele causes later flowering than the wild allele under short day and exhibits a signature of selection. These findings suggest that FT2c may have underpinned the evolution of photoperiodic flowering regulation in soybean domestication and highlight the evolutionary dynamics of this agronomically important gene family.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Glycine maxzzm321990; zzm321990Glycine sojazzm321990; FLOWERING LOCUS T; convergent evolution; domestication; flowering; parallel evolution
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28244155 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.13521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417