Abstract
To date, a small number of major flowering time loci have been identified in the related Triticeae crops, bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), durum wheat (T. durum), and barley (Hordeum vulgare). Natural genetic variants at these loci result in major phenotypic changes which have adapted crops to the novel environments encountered during the spread of agriculture. The polyploid nature of bread and durum wheat means that major flowering time loci in which recessive alleles confer adaptive advantage in related diploid species have not been readily identified. One such example is the PPD-H2 flowering time locus encoded by FLOWERING LOCUS T 3 (HvFT3) in the diploid crop barley, for which recessive mutant alleles confer delayed flowering under short day (SD) photoperiods. In autumn-sown barley, such alleles aid the repression of flowering over the winter, which help prevent the development of cold-sensitive floral organs until the onset of inductive long day (LD) photoperiods the following spring. While the identification of orthologous loci in wheat could provide breeders with alternative mechanisms to fine tune flowering time, systematic identification of wheat orthologs of HvFT3 has not been reported. Here, we characterize the FT gene families in six Poaceae species, identifying novel members in all taxa investigated, as well as FT3 homoeologs from the A, B and D genomes of hexaploid (TaFT3) and tetraploid wheat. Sequence analysis shows TaFT3 homoeologs display high similarity to the HvFT3 coding region (95–96%) and predicted protein (96–97%), with conservation of intron/exon structure across the five cereal species investigated. Genetic mapping and comparative analyses in hexaploid and tetraploid wheat find TaFT3 homoeologs map to the long arms of the group 1 chromosomes, collinear to HvFT3 in barley and FT3 orthologs in rice, foxtail millet and brachypodium. Genome-specific expression analyses show FT3 homoeologs in tetraploid and hexaploid wheat are upregulated under SD photoperiods, but not under LDs, analogous to the expression of HvFT3. Collectively, these results indicate that functional wheat orthologs of HvFT3 have been identified. The molecular resources generated here provide the foundation for engineering a novel major flowering time locus in wheat using forward or reverse genetics approaches.
Highlights
The rising global human population requires increases in agricultural productivity in order to meet food demand
(semi-) dominant mutant alleles at collinear cereal VERNALIZATION 1 (VRN-1) loci result in the abolishment of vernalization requirement, resulting in rapidcycling accessions which can proceed to flowering without the need for vernalization treatment (Cockram et al, 2007a,b)
In Arabidopsis, FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) is a key component in the floral signaling pathway (Kardailsky et al, 1999; Kobayashi et al, 1999). It is directly activated by CONSTANS (CO) in the leaf vasculature, after which FT acts as a mobile signal to promote floral transition in the apical meristem
Summary
The rising global human population requires increases in agricultural productivity in order to meet food demand. Given the central role of flowering time in the adaption of crops to local agricultural environments, the efficient manipulation of this trait is of particular interest under future climate change scenarios. (semi-) dominant mutant alleles at collinear cereal VERNALIZATION 1 (VRN-1) loci result in the abolishment of vernalization requirement, resulting in rapidcycling accessions which can proceed to flowering without the need for vernalization treatment (prolonged periods of low nonfreezing temperature) (Cockram et al, 2007a,b). During the domestication of temperate cereals, the dominant nature of such mutations meant the changes to flowering time they confer were readily selectable by Neolithic farmers (Jones et al, 2011). Beneficial traits controlled by recessive alleles would historically have been difficult to select in polyploids (Borrill et al, 2015)
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