Abstract

Phenotypic variation between individuals of a species is often under quantitative genetic control. Genomic analysis of gene expression polymorphisms between individuals is rapidly gaining popularity as a way to query the underlying mechanistic causes of variation between individuals. However, there is little direct evidence of a linkage between global gene expression polymorphisms and phenotypic consequences. In this report, we have mapped quantitative trait loci (QTLs)–controlling glucosinolate content in a population of 403 Arabidopsis Bay × Sha recombinant inbred lines, 211 of which were previously used to identify expression QTLs controlling the transcript levels of biosynthetic genes. In a comparative study, we have directly tested two plant biosynthetic pathways for association between polymorphisms controlling biosynthetic gene transcripts and the resulting metabolites within the Arabidopsis Bay × Sha recombinant inbred line population. In this analysis, all loci controlling expression variation also affected the accumulation of the resulting metabolites. In addition, epistasis was detected more frequently for metabolic traits compared to transcript traits, even when both traits showed similar distributions. An analysis of candidate genes for QTL-controlling networks of transcripts and metabolites suggested that the controlling factors are a mix of enzymes and regulatory factors. This analysis showed that regulatory connections can feedback from metabolism to transcripts. Surprisingly, the most likely major regulator of both transcript level for nearly the entire pathway and aliphatic glucosinolate accumulation is variation in the last enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, AOP2. This suggests that natural variation in transcripts may significantly impact phenotypic variation, but that natural variation in metabolites or their enzymatic loci can feed back to affect the transcripts.

Highlights

  • A longstanding goal in genetics is to unravel the molecular and genetic bases of complex traits such as disease resistance, growth, and development

  • The Bay-0 and Sha accessions differed in both the quantity of glucosinolates accumulated and the specific structures synthesized, verifying that the Bay-0 3 Sha recombinant inbred line (RIL) population is potentially informative for analyzing the relationship of expression quantitative trait locus (QTL) (eQTL) to metabolic variation

  • Transgressive segregation for this biosynthetic capability was previously observed in the Landsberg erecta (Ler) x Cvi RIL population and shown to result from epistasis between the glucosinolate locus (GSL).alkenyl/hydroxypropyl locus (AOP) and GSL.Elong loci [6,30,31,32,35,36,37]

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Summary

Introduction

A longstanding goal in genetics is to unravel the molecular and genetic bases of complex traits such as disease resistance, growth, and development. The introduction of the AOP2 transcript leads to induction of 17 of 22 aliphatic glucosinolate biosynthetic genes and three of seven regulatory genes (Figure 5) This supports the hypothesis that the Sha allele at the GSL.AOP QTL controls metabolite and transcript levels for aliphatic glucosinolates due to increased expression of the AOP2 gene. This suggests the presence of a previously unrecognized regulatory effect of AOP2, whereby it controls transcript accumulation for most biosynthetic genes potentially through transcription factors. The association of both GSL.AOP and GSL.Elong with eQTLs for the majority of aliphatic glucosinolate biosynthetic genes and metabolites (Figure 4) suggests a regulatory interplay between the metabolites directly synthesized by these enzymes and transcript levels for the aliphatic glucosinolate biosynthetic genes

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