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      Independent FLC Mutations as Causes of Flowering-Time Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana and Capsella rubella

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          Abstract

          Capsella rubella is an inbreeding annual forb closely related to Arabidopsis thaliana, a model species widely used for studying natural variation in adaptive traits such as flowering time. Although mutations in dozens of genes can affect flowering of A. thaliana in the laboratory, only a handful of such genes vary in natural populations. Chief among these are FRIGIDA ( FRI) and FLOWERING LOCUS C ( FLC). Common and rare FRI mutations along with rare FLC mutations explain a large fraction of flowering-time variation in A. thaliana. Here we document flowering time under different conditions in 20 C. rubella accessions from across the species’ range. Similar to A. thaliana, vernalization, long photoperiods and elevated ambient temperature generally promote flowering. In this collection of C. rubella accessions, we did not find any obvious loss-of-function FRI alleles. Using mapping-by-sequencing with two strains that have contrasting flowering behaviors, we identified a splice-site mutation in FLC as the likely cause of early flowering in accession 1408. However, other similarly early C. rubella accessions did not share this mutation. We conclude that the genetic basis of flowering-time variation in C. rubella is complex, despite this very young species having undergone an extreme genetic bottleneck when it split from C. grandiflora a few tens of thousands of years ago.

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          DnaSP, DNA polymorphism analyses by the coalescent and other methods.

          DnaSP is a software package for the analysis of DNA polymorphism data. Present version introduces several new modules and features which, among other options allow: (1) handling big data sets (approximately 5 Mb per sequence); (2) conducting a large number of coalescent-based tests by Monte Carlo computer simulations; (3) extensive analyses of the genetic differentiation and gene flow among populations; (4) analysing the evolutionary pattern of preferred and unpreferred codons; (5) generating graphical outputs for an easy visualization of results. The software package, including complete documentation and examples, is freely available to academic users from: http://www.ub.es/dnasp
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            Whole-genome sequencing of multiple Arabidopsis thaliana populations.

            The plant Arabidopsis thaliana occurs naturally in many different habitats throughout Eurasia. As a foundation for identifying genetic variation contributing to adaptation to diverse environments, a 1001 Genomes Project to sequence geographically diverse A. thaliana strains has been initiated. Here we present the first phase of this project, based on population-scale sequencing of 80 strains drawn from eight regions throughout the species' native range. We describe the majority of common small-scale polymorphisms as well as many larger insertions and deletions in the A. thaliana pan-genome, their effects on gene function, and the patterns of local and global linkage among these variants. The action of processes other than spontaneous mutation is identified by comparing the spectrum of mutations that have accumulated since A. thaliana diverged from its closest relative 10 million years ago with the spectrum observed in the laboratory. Recent species-wide selective sweeps are rare, and potentially deleterious mutations are more common in marginal populations.
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              FLOWERING LOCUS C encodes a novel MADS domain protein that acts as a repressor of flowering.

              Winter-annual ecotypes of Arabidopsis are relatively late flowering, unless the flowering of these ecotypes is promoted by exposure to cold (vernalization). This vernalization-suppressible, late-flowering phenotype results from the presence of dominant, late-flowering alleles at two loci, FRIGIDA (FRI) and FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC). In this study, we report that flc null mutations result in early flowering, demonstrating that the role of active FLC alleles is to repress flowering. FLC was isolated by positional cloning and found to encode a novel MADS domain protein. The levels of FLC mRNA are regulated positively by FRI and negatively by LUMINIDEPENDENS. FLC is also negatively regulated by vernalization. Overexpression of FLC from a heterologous promoter is sufficient to delay flowering in the absence of an active FRI allele. We propose that the level of FLC activity acts through a rheostat-like mechanism to control flowering time in Arabidopsis and that modulation of FLC expression is a component of the vernalization response.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Genetics
                Genetics
                genetics
                genetics
                genetics
                Genetics
                Genetics Society of America
                0016-6731
                1943-2631
                October 2012
                October 2012
                October 2012
                : 192
                : 2
                : 729-739
                Affiliations
                [* ]Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, 72076 Tübingen, Germany, and
                []State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
                Author notes

                DNA sequences from this article have been deposited with the GenBank Library (JQ992992-JQ993051, JX003246-JX003248); short read data have been deposited with the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) (ERP001651). Sequence variants have been deposited with Dryad ( http://datadryad.org), doi:10.5061/dryad.4rq51.

                [1]

                Present address: Department of Biotechnology, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007, India.

                [2 ]Corresponding author: Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Spemannstr. 35, 72076 Tübingen, Germany. E-mail: weigel@ 123456weigelworld.org
                Article
                143958
                10.1534/genetics.112.143958
                3454893
                22865739
                49da0950-3ad0-4e92-b0db-c55da17a326f
                Copyright © 2012 by the Genetics Society of America

                Available freely online through the author-supported open access option.

                History
                : 12 May 2012
                : 25 July 2012
                Categories
                Investigations
                Genetics of Complex Traits
                Custom metadata
                v1

                Genetics
                flowering time,arabidopsis thaliana,capsella rubella,mapping-by-sequencing,flowering locus c (flc)

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