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Parallel domestication with a broad mutational spectrum of determinate stem growth habit in leguminous crops.

Authors :
Li, Shuai
Ding, Yanhua
Zhang, Dajian
Wang, Xutong
Tang, Xuemin
Dai, Deyan
Jin, Hanqi
Lee, Suk‐Ha
Cai, Chunmei
Ma, Jianxin
Source :
Plant Journal. Nov2018, Vol. 96 Issue 4, p761-771. 11p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Summary: Stem growth habit is a key plant architecture trait determining yield potential in grain legumes, and the phenotypic change from the indeterminate stem growth habit of wild mungbeans (Vigna radiata) to the determinate stem growth habit of cultivated mungbeans is a critical domestication transition. Here we show that indeterminate stem growth in wild mungbean is modulated by a single gene, VrDet1, which encodes a signaling protein of shoot apical meristems. The transition from an indeterminate to a determinate stem growth habit was achieved by selection of two linked point mutations in two putative cis‐regulatory elements, resulting in a significant reduction in gene expression. Both the wild‐type nucleotides corresponding to the two point mutations were essential for VrDet1 function. In addition, two highly diverse haplotypes of Vrdet1 were found in cultivated mungbeans, suggesting dual domestication of Vrdet1. VrDet1 was orthologous to Dt1 in wild soybean and PvTFL1y in wild common bean, where multiple loss‐of‐function mutations altering the coding sequences of individual genes were selected to produce determinate stems in cultivated accessions. Interspecific comparison of these orthologs in the wild and cultivated accessions reveals the most conservative interspecific and intraspecific parallel domestication events with the broadest mutational spectrum of a domestication trait in leguminous crops. We also found that interspecifically and functionally conserved promoters possess cis‐regulatory elements that are highly conserved in kind but greatly variable in number and order, demonstrating the evolutionary dynamics of regulatory sequences. This work provides insights into the origins of cultivated mungbean and exemplifies the conservativeness and plasticity of the domestication processes of related crops. Significance Statement: This work addresses fundamental questions regarding the origins and domestication processes of cultivated mungbean by elucidating the genetic and molecular bases of stem growth habit, illustrating the conservativeness and plasticity of crop domestication. The findings lay a foundation for dissection of the regulatory mechanisms underlying stem growth habit and other agronomic traits with which it interacts, with the aim of optimizing plant architecture for enhanced yield potential and environmental adaptability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09607412
Volume :
96
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Plant Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132990523
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.14066