Evolution of the miR5200-FLOWERING LOCUS T flowering time regulon in the temperate grass subfamily Pooideae

[Display omitted] •miR5200 evolved at the base of Pooideae and shows high target sequence conservation.•Short days do not induce miR5200 transcription outside Brachypodium distachyon Bd21-3.•Barley miR5200 maturation, rather than transcription, appears photoperiod-sensitive. Flowering time is a care...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2017-09, Vol.114, p.111-121
Hauptverfasser: McKeown, Meghan, Schubert, Marian, Preston, Jill C., Fjellheim, Siri
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •miR5200 evolved at the base of Pooideae and shows high target sequence conservation.•Short days do not induce miR5200 transcription outside Brachypodium distachyon Bd21-3.•Barley miR5200 maturation, rather than transcription, appears photoperiod-sensitive. Flowering time is a carefully regulated trait controlled primarily through the action of the central genetic regulator, FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT). Recently it was demonstrated that a microRNA, miR5200, targets the end of the second exon of FT under short-day photoperiods in the grass subfamily Pooideae, thus preventing FT transcripts from reaching threshold levels under non-inductive conditions. Pooideae are an interesting group in that they rapidly diversified from the tropics into the northern temperate region during a major global cooling event spanning the Eocene-Oligocene transition. We hypothesize that miR5200 photoperiod-sensitive regulation of Pooideae flowering time networks assisted their transition into northern seasonal environments. Here, we test predictions derived from this hypothesis that miR5200, originally found in bread wheat and later identified in Brachypodium distachyon, (1) was present in the genome of the Pooideae common ancestor, (2) is transcriptionally regulated by photoperiod, and (3) is negatively correlated with FT transcript abundance, indicative of miR5200 regulating FT. Our results demonstrate that miR5200 did evolve at or around the base of Pooideae, but only acquired photoperiod-regulated transcription within the Brachypodium lineage. Based on expression profiles and previous data, we posit that the progenitor of miR5200 was co-regulated with FT by an unknown mechanism.
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2017.06.005