Attenuation of FLOWERING LOCUS C activity as a mechanism for the evolution of summer-annual flowering behavior in Arabidopsis
- 6 August 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (17) , 10102-10107
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1531467100
Abstract
Plant species have evolved a wide variety of flowering habits, each adapted to maximize reproductive success in their local environment. Even within a species, accessions from different environments can exhibit markedly different flowering behavior. In Arabidopsis, some accessions are rapid-cycling summer annuals, whereas others accessions are late flowering and vernalization responsive and thus behave as winter annuals. Two genes, FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) and FRIGIDA (FRI), interact synergistically to confer the winter-annual habit. Previous work has shown that many summer-annual accessions contain null mutations in the FRI gene; thus it appears that these summer-annual accessions have arisen from winter-annual ancestors by losing FRI function. In this work we demonstrate that naturally occurring allelic variation in FLC has provided another route to the evolution of summer-annual flowering behavior in Arabidopsis. We have identified two summer-annual accessions, Da (1)-12 and Shakhdara, that contain functional alleles of FRI, but are early flowering because of weak alleles of FLC. We have also determined that the weak allele of FLC found in Landsberg erecta is naturally occurring. Unlike accessions that have arisen because of loss-of-function mutations in FRI, the FLC alleles from Da (1)-12, Shakhdara, and Landsberg erecta are not nulls; however, they exhibit lower steady-state mRNA levels than strong alleles of FLC. Sequence analysis indicates that these weak alleles of FLC have arisen independently at least twice during the course of evolution.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- RNA Levels and Activity ofFLOWERING LOCUS CAre Modified in Mixed Genetic Backgrounds ofArabidopsis thalianaInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2001
- Loss of FLOWERING LOCUS C Activity Eliminates the Late-Flowering Phenotype of FRIGIDA and Autonomous Pathway Mutations but Not Responsiveness to VernalizationPlant Cell, 2001
- Memories of winter: vernalization and the competence to flowerPlant, Cell & Environment, 2000
- Molecular Analysis of FRIGIDA , a Major Determinant of Natural Variation in Arabidopsis Flowering TimeScience, 2000
- FLOWERING LOCUS C Encodes a Novel MADS Domain Protein That Acts as a Repressor of FloweringPlant Cell, 1999
- The FLF MADS Box Gene: A Repressor of Flowering in Arabidopsis Regulated by Vernalization and MethylationPlant Cell, 1999
- The late‐flowering phenotype of FRIGIDA and mutations in LUMINIDEPENDENS is suppressed in the Landsberg erecta strain of ArabidopsisThe Plant Journal, 1994
- The phenotype of some late‐flowering mutants is enhanced by a locus on chromosome 5 that is not effective in the Landsberg erecta wild‐typeThe Plant Journal, 1994
- The small, versatilepPZP family ofAgrobacterium binary vectors for plant transformationPlant Molecular Biology, 1994
- Genes conferring late flowering inArabidopsis thalianaGenetica, 1993