4.7 Article

A naturally occurring splicing site mutation in the Brassica rapa FLC1 gene is associated with variation in flowering time

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 60, Issue 4, Pages 1299-1308

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erp010

Keywords

BrFLC1; flowering time; splicing pattern; splicing site mutation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research and Development Programme [2006CB101606]
  2. National 863 High Technology Programme, P. R. China [2006AA100108]
  3. China National Key Technology R D Programme [2006BAD01A7-1-06]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation [30800753]
  5. Henan Province key Technology R D Programme [072101110400]

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FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC), encoding a MADS-domain transcription factor in Arabidopsis, is a repressor of flowering involved in the vernalization pathway. This provides a good reference for Brassica species. Genomes of Brassica species contain several FLC homologues and several of these colocalize with flowering-time QTL. Here the analysis of sequence variation of BrFLC1 in Brassica rapa and its association with the flowering-time phenotype is reported. The analysis revealed that a G -> A polymorphism at the 5' splice site in intron 6 of BrFLC1 is associated with flowering phenotype. Three BrFLC1 alleles with alternative splicing patterns, including two with different parts of intron 6 retained and one with the entire exon 6 excluded from the transcript, were identified in addition to alleles with normal splicing. It was inferred that aberrant splicing of the pre-mRNA leads to loss-of-function of BrFLC1. A CAPS marker was developed for this locus to distinguish Pi6+1(G) and Pi6+1(A). The polymorphism detected with this marker was significantly associated with flowering time in a collection of 121 B. rapa accessions and in a segregating Chinese cabbage doubled-haploid population. These findings suggest that a naturally occurring splicing mutation in the BrFLC1 gene contributes greatly to flowering-time variation in B. rapa.

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