Reinvention of hermaphroditism via activation of a RADIALIS-like gene in hexaploid persimmon
In flowering plants, different lineages have independently transitioned from the ancestral hermaphroditic state into and out of various sexual systems 1 . Polyploidizations are often associated with this plasticity in sexual systems 2 , 3 . Persimmons (the genus Diospyros ) have evolved dioecy via l...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature plants 2022-03, Vol.8 (3), p.217-224 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In flowering plants, different lineages have independently transitioned from the ancestral hermaphroditic state into and out of various sexual systems
1
. Polyploidizations are often associated with this plasticity in sexual systems
2
,
3
. Persimmons (the genus
Diospyros
) have evolved dioecy via lineage-specific palaeoploidizations. More recently, hexaploid
D. kaki
has established monoecy and also exhibits reversions from male to hermaphrodite flowers in response to natural environmental signals (natural hermaphroditism, NH), or to artificial cytokinin treatment (artificial hermaphroditism, AH). We sought to identify the molecular pathways underlying these polyploid-specific reversions to hermaphroditism. Co-expression network analyses identified regulatory pathways specific to NH or AH transitions. Surprisingly, the two pathways appeared to be antagonistic, with abscisic acid and cytokinin signalling for NH and AH, respectively. Among the genes common to both pathways leading to hermaphroditic flowers, we identified a small-Myb
RADIALIS
-like gene, named
DkRAD
, which is specifically activated in hexaploid
D. kaki
. Consistently, ectopic overexpression of
DkRAD
in two model plants resulted in hypergrowth of the gynoecium. These results suggest that production of hermaphrodite flowers via polyploidization depends on
DkRAD
activation, which is not associated with a loss-of-function within the existing sex determination pathway, but rather represents a new path to (or reinvention of) hermaphroditism.
In hexaploid persimmon, the
RADIALIS
-like gene was identified as a key player in the reversion of male flowers to hermaphroditism. Interestingly, it acts independently of the pathways involved in the ancestral transitions away from hermaphroditism. |
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ISSN: | 2055-0278 2055-0278 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41477-022-01107-z |