| Literature DB >> 34048948 |
Jing Liu1, Zhaoyan Chen1, Zhihui Wang1, Zhaoheng Zhang1, Xiaoming Xie1, Zihao Wang1, Lingling Chai1, Long Song1, Xuejiao Cheng1, Man Feng1, Xiaobo Wang1, Yanhong Liu1, Zhaorong Hu1, Jiewen Xing1, Zhenqi Su1, Huiru Peng1, Mingming Xin1, Yingyin Yao1, Weilong Guo1, Qixin Sun1, Jie Liu2, Zhongfu Ni3.
Abstract
Polish wheat (Triticum polonicum) is a unique tetraploid wheat species characterized by an elongated outer glume. The genetic control of the long-glume trait by a single semi-dominant locus, P1 (from Polish wheat), was established more than 100 years ago, but the underlying causal gene and molecular nature remain elusive. Here, we report the isolation of VRT-A2, encoding an SVP-clade MADS-box transcription factor, as the P1 candidate gene. Genetic evidence suggests that in T. polonicum, a naturally occurring sequence rearrangement in the intron-1 region of VRT-A2 leads to ectopic expression of VRT-A2 in floral organs where the long-glume phenotype appears. Interestingly, we found that the intron-1 region is a key ON/OFF molecular switch for VRT-A2 expression, not only because it recruits transcriptional repressors, but also because it confers intron-mediated transcriptional enhancement. Genotypic analyses using wheat accessions indicated that the P1 locus is likely derived from a single natural mutation in tetraploid wheat, which was subsequently inherited by hexaploid T. petropavlovskyi. Taken together, our findings highlight the promoter-proximal intron variation as a molecular basis for phenotypic differentiation, and thus species formation in Triticum plants.Entities:
Keywords: P1; T. polonicum; VRT-A2; long glume; species differentiation
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34048948 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2021.05.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164