Abstract

Background

Plant architecture and the vegetative-reproductive transition have major impacts on the agronomic success of crop plants, but genetic mechanisms underlying these traits in cotton (Gossypium spp.) have not been identified.

Results

We identify four natural mutations in GoCEN-Dt associated with cluster fruiting (cl) and early maturity. The situ hybridization shows that GhCEN is preferentially expressed in cotton shoot apical meristems (SAM) of the main stem and axillary buds. Constitutive GhCEN-Dt overexpression suppresses the transition of the cotton vegetative apex to a reproductive shoot. Silencing GoCEN leads to early flowering and determinate growth, and in tetraploids causes the main stem to terminate in a floral bud, a novel phenotype that exemplifies co-adaptation of polyploid subgenomes and suggests new research and/or crop improvement approaches. Natural cl variations are enriched in cottons adapted to high latitudes with short frost-free periods, indicating that mutants of GoCEN have been strongly selected for early maturity.

Conclusion

We show that the cotton gene GoCEN-Dt, a homolog of Antirrhinum CENTRORADIALIS, is responsible for determinate growth habit and cluster fruiting. Insight into the genetic control of branch and flower differentiation offers new approaches to develop early maturing cultivars of cotton and other crops with plant architecture appropriate for mechanical harvesting.

Details

Title
Natural variation in a CENTRORADIALIS homolog contributed to cluster fruiting and early maturity in cotton
Author
Liu, Dexin; Teng, Zhonghua; Kong, Jie; Liu, Xueying; Wang, Wenwen; Zhang, Xiao; Zhai, Tengfei; Deng, Xianping; Wang, Jinxia; Zeng, Jianyan; Xiao, Yuehua; Guo, Kai; Zhang, Jian; Liu, Dajun; Wang, Weiran; Zhang, Zhengsheng
Publication year
2018
Publication date
2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712229
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2158499687
Copyright
Copyright © 2018. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.