| Literature DB >> 34258645 |
Candy M Taylor1,2, Gagan Garg3, Jens D Berger3, Federico M Ribalta1, Janine S Croser1,2, Karam B Singh2,3,4, Wallace A Cowling5,6, Lars G Kamphuis2,3,4, Matthew N Nelson2,3.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: A plant-specific Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like homologue was identified as a candidate gene for the efl mutation in narrow-leafed lupin, which alters phenology by reducing vernalisation requirement. The vernalisation pathway is a key component of flowering time control in plants from temperate regions but is not well understood in the legume family. Here we examined vernalisation control in the temperate grain legume species, narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.), and discovered a candidate gene for an ethylene imine mutation (efl). The efl mutation changes phenology from late to mid-season flowering and additionally causes transformation from obligate to facultative vernalisation requirement. The efl locus was mapped to pseudochromosome NLL-10 in a recombinant inbred line (RIL) mapping population developed by accelerated single seed descent. Candidate genes were identified in the reference genome, and a diverse panel of narrow-leafed lupins was screened to validate mutations specific to accessions with efl. A non-synonymous SNP mutation within an S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent methyltransferase protein domain of a Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like (TGS1) orthologue was identified as the candidate mutation giving rise to efl. This mutation caused substitution of an amino acid within an established motif at a position that is otherwise highly conserved in several plant families and was perfectly correlated with the efl phenotype in F2 and F6 genetic population and a panel of diverse accessions, including the original efl mutant. Expression of the TGS1 homologue did not differ between wild-type and efl genotypes, supporting altered functional activity of the gene product. This is the first time a TGS1 orthologue has been associated with vernalisation response and flowering time control in any plant species.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34258645 PMCID: PMC8440268 DOI: 10.1007/s00122-021-03910-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Appl Genet ISSN: 0040-5752 Impact factor: 5.699
Fig. 1Frequency of mean days to flowering for a 200 F2 individuals and b 185 F6 recombinant inbred lines of narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) segregating at the efl flowering time locus. The populations were derived from a single cross between varieties, Chittick (efl) and Geebung (Efl). The mean flowering times for the parental varieties are indicated by yellow and dark blue arrows, respectively. Dashed boxes in (a) highlight the 33 earliest and 32 latest flowering F2 individuals whose DNA were combined into early and late bulk samples for genotyping
Summary of the 23 linkage groups constructed in a genetic map of an F6 RIL population (n = 181) derived between Australian narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) varieties, Chittick (efl, ku), and Geebung (Efl, ku)
| Pseudochromosome represented by linkage group | Linkage group ID | Size of linkage group (cM) | Number of markers in linkage group |
|---|---|---|---|
| NLL-01 (top) | CxG_LG01 | 27.7 | 43 |
| NLL-01 (bottom) | CxG_LG02 | 0.6 | 10 |
| NLL-02 | CxG_LG03 | 80.7 | 227 |
| NLL-03 (top) | CxG_LG04 | 1.7 | 12 |
| NLL-03 (bottom) | CxG_LG05 | 86.3 | 188 |
| NLL-04 (top) | CxG_LG06 | 41.5 | 80 |
| NLL-04 (bottom) | CxG_LG07 | 23.3 | 43 |
| NLL-05 | CxG_LG08 | 26.4 | 86 |
| NLL-06 (top) | CxG_LG09 | 6.4 | 21 |
| NLL-06 (bottom) | CxG_LG10 | 44.3 | 342 |
| NLL-07 | CxG_LG11 | 17.5 | 84 |
| NLL-08 | CxG_LG12 | 8.0 | 24 |
| NLL-09 | CxG_LG13 | 77.2 | 92 |
| NLL-10 | CxG_LG14 | 131.8 | 403 |
| NLL-11 | * | ||
| NLL-12 (top) | CxG_LG15 | 4.4 | 12 |
| NLL-12 (bottom) | CxG_LG16 | 12.5 | 55 |
| NLL-13 | CxG_LG17 | 7.1 | 27 |
| NLL-14 | CxG_LG18 | 75.0 | 198 |
| NLL-15 | * | ||
| NLL-16 | CxG_LG19 | 26.4 | 72 |
| NLL-17 (top) | CxG_LG20 | 5.5 | 36 |
| NLL-17 (bottom) | CxG_LG21 | 0.7 | 8 |
| NLL-18 | CxG_LG22 | 67.1 | 222 |
| NLL-19 | * | ||
| NLL-20 | CxG_LG23 | 9.1 | 30 |
| Total | 781.2 | 2315 |
The genetic map incorporated 2314 DArTseq molecular markers and one artificial marker representing efl phenotype within the RIL population developed in this study
Asterisks (*) denote incidences where a linkage group was not found to largely represent one of the 20 narrow-leafed lupin pseudochromosomes (Hane et al. 2017)
Fig. 2Neighbour-joining phylogenetic tree depicting homology of the Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like gene family in six angiosperm families and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). Taxa and protein accession IDs are coloured to differentiate eukaryotic (black) and plant-specific (green) homologues. Yellow and purple tree branches distinguish papilionoid clades typically comprising warm-season and cool-season legume species, respectively. Taxa abbreviations and protein accession IDs are fully described in Online Resource 2
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of the 10 unique single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) haplotypes observed within the coding sequence (1815 nucleotides) of a plant-specific Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like (LanTGS1) homologue (Lup005529.1) in narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.). SNPs have been colour coded such that gold represents the Chittick-like (efl) genotype, while blue represents an alternative genotype. Background fills are used to highlight SNPs that create non-synonymous mutations resulting in amino acid (AA) changes. The number beneath each non-synonymous SNP corresponds to the AA residue affected within the translated protein sequence. AA residue 534 corresponds to the Chittick haplotype which has a unique G to A mutation. The reference allele corresponds to the genotype presented in the Tanjil variety haplotype
Fig. 4Partial alignment of the S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent methyltransferase (SAM MTase) superfamily domain (IPR029063) within Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like (TGS1) protein sequences from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and 29 diploid angiosperms. Shading indicates perfectly (black) and highly (≥ 50%; grey) conserved residues. Conserved motifs within the SAM MTase superfamily of proteins are labelled according to annotations from Mouaikel et al. (2003) and Fauman et al. (1999). Secondary protein structures are indicated by purple cylinders (α helix) and green arrows (β strands). A red box highlights an alanine residue which is substituted with threonine in the Chittick narrow-leafed lupin variety containing the efl mutation for facultative vernalisation requirement and mid-season flowering. Residues with motif X that have been experimentally mutated by Mouaikel et al. (2003) are marked by an “#” symbol. Taxa abbreviations and protein accession IDs are fully described in Online Resource 2
Fig. 5a Front and b side views of the SWISS-MODEL predicted secondary and tertiary structure of the plant-specific Trimethylguanosine Synthase1-like (TGS1) protein (OIW10381.1; 717 amino acids) in narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.). The model represents residues 493–696, which share homology to the human TGS1 template, 3dgh.1.A. Purple helices represent α-helices and green arrows represent β-strands, which are numbered. An orange arrow is used to highlight an alanine/threonine substitution at amino acid residue 534, which co-segregates with the efl phenotype for mid-late season flowering time and is located within a motif (motif X) involved in substrate binding