4.6 Review

Epigenetic imbalance and the floral developmental abnormality of the in vitro-regenerated oil palm Elaeis guineensis

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 108, Issue 8, Pages 1453-1462

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcq266

Keywords

Epigenetics; flower development; clonal fidelity; MADS-box; mantled phenotype; somaclonal variation; transposable elements; Elaeis guineensis

Categories

Funding

  1. EPIDEV (Epigenetic Control of Developmental Gene Expression)
  2. FAST (French-Australian Science and Technology)
  3. Australian Government [FR070100]
  4. French Partenariat Hubert Curien [16079RJ]
  5. European Commission [MOIF-CT-2004-509893 VARIOMETH]
  6. French Ministry of Foreign Affairs [BFE2002/340634B]

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Background The large-scale clonal propagation of oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) is being stalled by the occurrence of the mantled somaclonal variation. Indeed, this abnormality which presents a homeotic-like conversion of male floral organs into carpelloid structures, hampers oil production since the supernumerary female organs are either sterile or produce fruits with poor oil yields. Scope In the last 15 years, the prevailing point of view on the origin of the mantled floral phenotype has evolved from a random mutation event triggered by in vitro culture to a hormone-dependent dysfunction of gene regulation processes. In this review, we retrace the history of the research on the mantled variation in the light of the parallel advances made in the understanding of plant development regulation in model systems and more specifically in the role of epigenetic mechanisms. An overview of the current state of oil palm genomic and transcriptomic resources, which are key to any comparison with model organisms, is given. We show that, while displaying original characteristics, the mantled phenotype of oil palm is morphologically, and possibly molecularly, related to MADS-box genes mutants described in model plants. We also discuss the occurrence of comparable floral phenotypes in other palm species. Conclusions Beyond its primary interest in the search for discriminating markers against an economically crippling phenotype, the study of the mantled abnormality also provides a unique opportunity to investigate the regulation of reproductive development in a perennial tropical palm. On the basis of recent results, we propose that future efforts should concentrate on the epigenetic regulation targeting MADS-box genes and transposable elements of oil palm, since both types of sequences are most likely to be involved in the mantled variant phenotype.

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