Maize domestication phenotypes reveal strigolactone networks coordinating grain size evolution with kernel-bearing cupule architecture

Author:

Guan Jiahn-Chou123ORCID,Li Changsheng4ORCID,Flint-Garcia Sherry5ORCID,Suzuki Masaharu123ORCID,Wu Shan1ORCID,Saunders Jonathan W1ORCID,Dong Lemeng4ORCID,Bouwmeester Harro J4ORCID,McCarty Donald R123ORCID,Koch Karen E123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Horticultural Sciences Department, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida 32610 , USA

2. Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida 32610 , USA

3. Genetics Institute, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida 32610 , USA

4. Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, University of Amsterdam , Amsterdam 100 BE , The Netherlands

5. United States Department of Agriculture – Agricultural Research Service , Columbia, Missouri 65211 , USA

Abstract

AbstractThe maize (Zea mays) ear represents one of the most striking domestication phenotypes in any crop species, with the cob conferring an exceptional yield advantage over the ancestral form of teosinte. Remodeling of the grain-bearing surface required profound developmental changes. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear and can only be partly attributed to the known domestication gene Teosinte glume architecture 1 (Tga1). Here we show that a more complete conversion involves strigolactones (SLs), and that these are prominent players not only in the Tga1 phenotype but also other domestication features of the ear and kernel. Genetic combinations of a teosinte tga1 allele with three SL-related mutants progressively enhanced ancestral morphologies. The SL mutants, in addition to modulating the tga1 phenotype, also reshaped kernel-bearing pedicels and cupules in a teosinte-like manner. Genetic and molecular evidence are consistent with SL regulation of TGA1, including direct interaction of TGA1 with components of the SL-signaling system shown here to mediate TGA1 availability by sequestration. Roles of the SL network extend to enhancing maize seed size and, importantly, coordinating increased kernel growth with remodeling of protective maternal tissues. Collectively, our data show that SLs have central roles in releasing kernels from restrictive maternal encasement and coordinating other factors that increase kernel size, physical support, and their exposure on the grain-bearing surface.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

Reference63 articles.

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