4.7 Article

Promotion of natural flowers by JcFT depends on JcLFY in the perennial woody species Jatropha curcas

Journal

PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 318, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2022.111236

Keywords

Euphorbiaceae; Flowering Locus T; LEAFY silenced; Floral transition; Flower development; Hybridization

Funding

  1. Yunnan Fundamental Research Projects [2018FB060, 202003AD150011]
  2. West Light Foundation of the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) [Y9XB091]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [31700273, 31771605]
  4. Young Elite Scientists Sponsorship Program of the Chinese Society of Tropical Crops [CSTC-QN201701]
  5. Key Deployment Program of the CAS [ZDRW-ZS-2017-2]

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This study elucidates the important roles of JcFT and JcLFY in flowering transition and floral organ development in Jatropha, as well as their relationship. JcFT is the central gene for floral meristem transition, while JcLFY is the key gene for floral and inflorescence development.
Production of normal gametes is necessary for flowering plant reproduction, which involves the transition from vegetative to reproductive stage and floral organ development. Such transitions and floral development are modulated by various environmental and endogenous stimuli and controlled by sophisticated regulatory networks. FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) and LEAFY (LFY) are two key genes that integrate signals from multiple genetic pathways in Arabidopsis. However, the comprehensive functions and relationship between these two genes in trees are poorly understood. In this study, we found that JcFT played a vital role in regulating the flowering transition in the perennial woody species Jatropha curcas. JcLFY also involved in regulating this transition and controlled floral organ development. The non-flowering phenotype of JcFT-RNAi was rescued successfully by overexpression of JcLFY, while the abnormal flowers produced by JcLFY silencing were not recovered by JcFT overexpression via hybridization. These results indicate that JcFT, in which a mutation leads to a nonflowering phenotype, is the central gene of the floral meristem transition and that JcLFY, in which a mutation leads to striking changes in flowering and often sterility, is the central floral and inflorescence development gene. Moreover, our hybridization results suggest that JcLFY acts downstream of JcFT in Jatropha.

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