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The oil palm SHELL gene controls oil yield and encodes a homologue of SEEDSTICK.

Authors :
Singh, Rajinder
Low, Eng-Ti Leslie
Ooi, Leslie Cheng-Li
Ong-Abdullah, Meilina
Ting, Ngoot-Chin
Nagappan, Jayanthi
Nookiah, Rajanaidu
Amiruddin, Mohd Din
Rosli, Rozana
Manaf, Mohamad Arif Abdul
Chan, Kuang-Lim
Halim, Mohd Amin
Azizi, Norazah
Lakey, Nathan
Smith, Steven W.
Budiman, Muhammad A.
Hogan, Michael
Bacher, Blaire
Van Brunt, Andrew
Wang, Chunyan
Source :
Nature. 8/15/2013, Vol. 500 Issue 7462, p340-344. 5p. 2 Color Photographs, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

A key event in the domestication and breeding of the oil palm Elaeis guineensis was loss of the thick coconut-like shell surrounding the kernel. Modern E. guineensis has three fruit forms, dura (thick-shelled), pisifera (shell-less) and tenera (thin-shelled), a hybrid between dura and pisifera. The pisifera palm is usually female-sterile. The tenera palm yields far more oil than dura, and is the basis for commercial palm oil production in all of southeast Asia. Here we describe the mapping and identification of the SHELL gene responsible for the different fruit forms. Using homozygosity mapping by sequencing, we found two independent mutations in the DNA-binding domain of a homologue of the MADS-box gene SEEDSTICK (STK, also known as AGAMOUS-LIKE 11), which controls ovule identity and seed development in Arabidopsis. The SHELL gene is responsible for the tenera phenotype in both cultivated and wild palms from sub-Saharan Africa, and our findings provide a genetic explanation for the single gene hybrid vigour (or heterosis) attributed to SHELL, via heterodimerization. This gene mutation explains the single most important economic trait in oil palm, and has implications for the competing interests of global edible oil production, biofuels and rainforest conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
500
Issue :
7462
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
89799239
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12356