4.8 Article

A critical role of the soybean evening complex in the control of photoperiod sensitivity and adaptation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2010241118

Keywords

flowering; adaptation; LUX ARRHYTHMO (LUX); evening complex (EC); soybean

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31725021, 31901500, 31701445, 31930083]
  2. Major Program of Guangdong Basic and Applied Research Grant [2019B030302006]

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Photoperiod sensitivity is crucial for plant adaptation and crop production, with the J and LUX genes playing key roles in regulating flowering in soybean. The interaction between the J-LUX complex suppresses transcription of the key flowering repressor E1, indicating their central role in soybean photoperiod sensitivity. This highlights the potential for targeted breeding of soybean varieties with precise flowering time adaptation by manipulating EC and E1 family genes.
Photoperiod sensitivity is a key factor in plant adaptation and crop production. In the short-day plant soybean, adaptation to low latitude environments is provided by mutations at the J locus, which confer extended flowering phase and thereby improve yield. The identity of J as an ortholog of Arabidopsis ELF3, a component of the circadian evening complex (EC), implies that orthologs of other EC components may have similar roles. Here we show that the two soybean homeologs of LUX ARRYTHMO interact with J to form a soybean EC. Characterization of mutants reveals that these genes are highly redundant in function but together are critical for flowering under short day, where the lux1 lux2 double mutant shows extremely late flowering and a massively extended flowering phase. This phenotype exceeds that of any soybean flowering mutant reported to date, and is strongly reminiscent of the Maryland Mammoth tobacco mutant that featured in the seminal 1920 study of plant photoperiodism by Garner and Allard [W. W. Garner, H. A. Allard, J. Agric. Res. 18, 553-606 (1920)]. We further demonstrate that the J-LUX complex suppresses transcription of the key flowering repressor E1 and its two homologs via LUX binding sites in their promoters. These results indicate that the EC-E1 interaction has a central role in soybean photoperiod sensitivity, a phenomenon also first described by Garner and Allard. EC and E1 family genes may therefore constitute key targets for customized breeding of soybean varieties with precise flowering time adaptation, either by introgression of natural variation or generation of new mutants by gene editing.

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