Control of petal shape and floral zygomorphy in <i>Lotus japonicus</i>

Xianzhong Feng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhong Zhao(Fudan University), Zhaoxia Tian(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shilei Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yonghai Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhigang Cai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yumei Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jun Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zheng Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lin Weng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianghua Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Leiying Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xizhi Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianghong Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shusei Sato(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Satoshi Tabata(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wei Ma(John Innes Centre), Xiangling Cao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaohe Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chongrong Sun(Fudan University), Da Luo(John Innes Centre)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 20, 2006
Cited by 239Open Access
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Abstract

Zygomorphic flowers, with bilateral (dorsoventral) symmetry, are considered to have evolved several times independently in flowering plants. In Antirrhinum majus, floral dorsoventral symmetry depends on the activity of two TCP-box genes, CYCLOIDEA (CYC) and DICHOTOMA (DICH). To examine whether the same molecular mechanism of floral asymmetry operates in the distantly related Rosid clade of eudicots, in which asymmetric flowers are thought to have evolved independently, we investigated the function of a CYC homologue LjCYC2 in a papilionoid legume, Lotus japonicus. We showed a role for LjCYC2 in establishing dorsal identity by altering its expression in transgenic plants and analyzing its mutant allele squared standard 1 (squ1). Furthermore, we identified a lateralizing factor, Keeled wings in Lotus 1 (Kew1), which plays a key role in the control of lateral petal identity, and found LjCYC2 interacted with Kew1, resulting in a double mutant that bore all petals with ventralized identity to some extents. Thus, we demonstrate that CYC homologues have been independently recruited as determinants of petal identities along the dorsoventral axis in two distant lineages of flowering plants, suggesting a common molecular origin for the mechanisms controlling floral zygomorphy.


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