4.7 Article

Correlation between Inflorescence Architecture and Floral Asymmetry-Evidence from Aberrant Flowers in Canna L. (Cannaceae)

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11192512

Keywords

aberrant flower; asymmetric flower; Canna; floral symmetry; inflorescence; Zingiberales

Categories

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M701261]
  2. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2021A1515110137]
  3. Characteristic Innovation Project of Ordinary Universities in Guangdong Province [2022KTSCX285]
  4. UCAS Joint PhD training Program
  5. Cornell's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

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Studies on floral symmetry often neglect asymmetric flowers and their position and function within the inflorescence structure. In this study, the inflorescence structure and floral morphology of normal and aberrant flowers from Canna plants were analyzed and compared. The results showed that aberrant flowers formed abnormal partial florescences and exhibited variations in symmetry, orientation, and stamen petaloidy. The observations strongly support the hypothesis that irregular petaloidy of the stamens is correlated with an asymmetric morphogenetic field within the inflorescence.
Floral symmetry studies often focus on the development of monosymmetric and polysymmetric flowers, whereas asymmetric flowers and their position and function within the inflorescence structure are largely neglected. Cannaceae is one of the few families that possesses truly asymmetric flowers, serving as a model to study the characters and mechanisms involved in the development of floral asymmetry and its context within the developing and mature inflorescence. In this study, inflorescence structure and floral morphology of normal asymmetric flowers and 16 aberrant flower collections from Canna indica L. and C. glauca L. were photographed, analyzed, and compared with attention to stamen petaloidy, floral symmetry, and inflorescence branching patterns anterior and posterior to the aberrant flower. In comparison with normal flowers, the aberrant flowers are arranged into abnormal partial florescences, and vary in floral symmetry, orientation, and degree of androecial petaloidy. The appendage of the fertile stamen is universally located distal from the higher order bract, indicating an underlying influence of inflorescence architecture. A synthetic model is proposed to explain the relationship between floral symmetry and inflorescence structure. Data from the observation of aberrant phenotypes strongly support the hypothesis that irregular petaloidy of the stamens is correlated with an asymmetric morphogenetic field within the inflorescence that contributes to the overall floral asymmetry in Canna flowers.

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