Abstract

The floral homeotic C function gene AGAMOUS (AG) plays crucial roles in Arabidopsis development by specifying stamen and carpel identity, repressing A-class genes, as well as regulating floral meristem determination. Although the function of AG homologs from other core eudicots appears highly conserved, the role of AG orthologs in the design of floral architecture in basal angiosperm remains unknown. We isolated and identified an AG ortholog from Magnolia wufengensis, a woody basal angiosperm belonging to the Magnoliaceae. Sequence and phylogenetic analyses revealed that it is a clade member of the euAG lineage, and hence, the gene is referred to as MAwuAG (M. wufengensis AGAMOUS). Moreover, two highly conserved motifs specific to C proteins, AG motifs I and II, are found in the C-terminal regions of the MAwuAG protein, but the N-terminal extensions that usually appear in euAG lineage members from eudicots were not found in MAwuAG. The cDNA has the first in-frame ATG immediately preceding the MADS domain. A semi-quantitative PCR analysis showed that the expression of MAwuAG was restricted to reproductive organs of stamens and carpels. The transgenic Arabidopsis containing 35S::MAwuAG displayed extremely early flowering, bigger stamens and carpels, and homeotic conversion of petals into staminoid organs, but ectopic expression of MAwuAG in the first whorls failed to convert the sepals into carpeloid structures that are usually observed in the overexpression transgenic Arabidopsis of AG orthologs from other core eudicots. In addition, the phenotype of the transgenic 35S::MAwuAG Arabidopsis revealed that the abscission of the outer three floral whorls (sepals, petals, and stamens) was inhibited.

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