Marigold (Tagetes erecta), as one member of Asteraceae family, bears a typical capitulum with two morphologically distinct florets. The SEPALLATA genes are involved in regulating the floral meristem determinacy, organ identity, fruit maturation, seed formation, and plant architecture. Here, five SEP-like genes were cloned and identified from marigold. Sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that TeSEP3−1, TeSEP3−2, and TeSEP3−3 proteins were grouped into SEP3 clade, and TeSEP1 and TeSEP4 proteins were clustered into SEP1/2/4 clade. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis revealed that TeSEP1 and TeSEP3−3 were broadly expressed in floral organs, and that TeSEP3−2 and TeSEP4 were mainly expressed in pappus and corollas, while TeSEP3−1 was mainly expressed in two inner whorls. Ectopic expression of TeSEP1, TeSEP3−2, TeSEP3−3, and TeSEP4 in arabidopsis and tobacco resulted in early flowering. However, overexpression of TeSEP3−1 in arabidopsis and tobacco caused no visible phenotypic changes. Notably, overexpression of TeSEP4 in tobacco decreased the number of petals and stamens. Overexpression of TeSEP1 in tobacco led to longer sepals and simpler inflorescence architecture. The comprehensive pairwise interaction analysis suggested that TeSEP proteins had a broad interaction with class A, C, D, E proteins to form dimers. The yeast three-hybrid analysis suggested that in ternary complexes, class B proteins interacted with TeSEP3 by forming heterodimer TePI-TeAP3−2. The regulatory network analysis of MADS-box genes in marigold further indicated that TeSEP proteins played a “glue” role in regulating floral organ development, implying functional conservation and divergence of MADS box genes in regulating two-type floret developments. This study provides an insight into the formation mechanism of floral organs of two-type florets, thus broadening our knowledge of the genetic basis of flower evolution.
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