compact shoot and leafy head 1, a mutation affects leaf initiation and developmental transition in rice (Oryza sativa L.) |
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Authors: | Qian-Hao Zhu Elizabeth S. Dennis Narayana M. Upadhyaya |
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Affiliation: | (1) CSIRO Plant Industry, Australian Capital Territory, 2601 Canberra, Australia;(2) New South Wales Agricultural Genomics Centre, Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, 2678, Australia |
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Abstract: | The shoot apical meristem (SAM) produces lateral organs in a regular spacing (phyllotaxy) and at a regular interval (phyllochron) during the vegetative phase. In a Dissociation (Ds) insertion rice population, we identified a mutant, compact shoot and leafy head 1 (csl1), which produced massive number of leaves (∼70) during the vegetative phase. In csl1, the transition from the vegetative to the reproductive phase was delayed by about 2 months under long-day conditions. With a reduced leaf size and severe dwarfism, csl1 failed to produce a normal panicle after the transition to reproductive growth. Instead, it produced a leafy panicle, in which all primary rachis-branches were converted to vegetative shoots. Phenotypically csl1 resembled pla mutants in short plastochron but was more severe in the conversion of the reproductive organs to vegetative organs. In addition, neither the expression nor the coding region of PLA1 or PLA2 was affected in csl1. csl1 is most likely a dominant mutation because no mutant segregant was observed in progeny of 67 siblings of the csl1 mutant. CSL1 may represent a novel gene, which functions downstream of PLA1 and/or PLA2, or alternatively functions in a separate pathway, involved in the regulation of leaf initiation and developmental transition via plant hormones or other mobile signals. |
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Keywords: | compact shoot and leafy head 1 Developmental transition Leaf initiation Phyllochron Rice |
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