4.6 Article

Evolution of petal epidermal micromorphology in Leguminosae and its use as a marker of petal identity

期刊

ANNALS OF BOTANY
卷 104, 期 6, 页码 1099-1110

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcp211

关键词

Epidermis; Fabaceae; Papilionoideae; Caesalpinioideae; Mimosoideae; petal surface; scanning electron microscopy; papillose conical cells; tabular rugose cells; tabular flat cells; organ identity

资金

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACyT) from Mexico
  2. NSERC Discovery Grant program (Canada)
  3. Molecular and Organismic Research in Plant History (MORPH)

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Background and Aims The legume flower is highly variable in symmetry and differentiation of petal types. Most papilionoid flowers are zygomorphic with three types of petals: one dorsal, two lateral and two ventral petals. Mimosoids have radial flowers with reduced petals while caesalpinioids display a range from strongly zygomorphic to nearly radial symmetry. The aims are to characterize the petal micromorphology relative to flower morphology and evolution within the family and assess its use as a marker of petal identity (whether dorsal, lateral or ventral) as determined by the expression of developmental genes. Methods Petals were analysed using the scanning electron microscope and light microscope. A total of 175 species were studied representing 26 tribes and 89 genera in all three subfamilies of the Leguminosae. Key Results The papilionoids have the highest degree of variation of epidermal types along the dorsiventral axis within the flower. In Loteae and genistoids, in particular, it is common for each petal type to have a different major epidermal micromorphology. Papillose conical cells are mainly found on dorsal and lateral petals. Tabular rugose cells are mainly found on lateral petals and tabular flat cells are found only in ventral petals. Caesalpinioids lack strong micromorphological variation along this axis and usually have only a single major epidermal type within a flower, although the type maybe either tabular rugose cells, papillose conical cells or papillose knobby rugose cells, depending on the species. Conclusions Strong micromorphological variation between different petals in the flower is exclusive to the subfamily Papilionoideae. Both major and minor epidermal types can be used as micromorphological markers of petal identity, at least in papilionoids, and they are important characters of flower evolution in the whole family. The molecular developmental pathway between specific epidermal micromorphology and the expression of petal identity genes has yet to be established.

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