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From Many,One: Genetic Control of Prolificacy during Maize Domestication
Authors:David M. Wills  Clinton J. Whipple  Shohei Takuno  Lisa E. Kursel  Laura M. Shannon  Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra  John F. Doebley
Affiliation:1.Department of Genetics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America;2.Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States of America;3.Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, United States of America;4.The Genome Center, and Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, California, United States of America;Harvard University, United States of America
Abstract:A reduction in number and an increase in size of inflorescences is a common aspect of plant domestication. When maize was domesticated from teosinte, the number and arrangement of ears changed dramatically. Teosinte has long lateral branches that bear multiple small ears at their nodes and tassels at their tips. Maize has much shorter lateral branches that are tipped by a single large ear with no additional ears at the branch nodes. To investigate the genetic basis of this difference in prolificacy (the number of ears on a plant), we performed a genome-wide QTL scan. A large effect QTL for prolificacy (prol1.1) was detected on the short arm of chromosome 1 in a location that has previously been shown to influence multiple domestication traits. We fine-mapped prol1.1 to a 2.7 kb “causative region” upstream of the grassy tillers1 (gt1) gene, which encodes a homeodomain leucine zipper transcription factor. Tissue in situ hybridizations reveal that the maize allele of prol1.1 is associated with up-regulation of gt1 expression in the nodal plexus. Given that maize does not initiate secondary ear buds, the expression of gt1 in the nodal plexus in maize may suppress their initiation. Population genetic analyses indicate positive selection on the maize allele of prol1.1, causing a partial sweep that fixed the maize allele throughout most of domesticated maize. This work shows how a subtle cis-regulatory change in tissue specific gene expression altered plant architecture in a way that improved the harvestability of maize.
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