Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales

The Zingiberales is an order of tropical monocots that exhibits diverse floral morphologies. The evolution of petaloid, laminar stamens, staminodes, and styles contributes to this diversity. The laminar style is a derived trait in the family Cannaceae and plays an important role in pollination as it...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kelsie eMorioka, Roxana eYockteng, Ana M. R. Almeida, Chelsea eSpecht
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.01106/full
id doaj-75cdacf987b7488c9b616caeabef9586
record_format Article
spelling doaj-75cdacf987b7488c9b616caeabef95862020-11-25T00:22:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2015-12-01610.3389/fpls.2015.01106165486Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the ZingiberalesKelsie eMorioka0Roxana eYockteng1Roxana eYockteng2Roxana eYockteng3Ana M. R. Almeida4Ana M. R. Almeida5Chelsea eSpecht6University of California BerkeleyUniversity of California BerkeleyColombian Corporation for Agricultural Research (CORPOICA)Muséum National d’Histoire NaturelleUniversity of California BerkeleyUniversidade Federal da BahiaUniversity of California BerkeleyThe Zingiberales is an order of tropical monocots that exhibits diverse floral morphologies. The evolution of petaloid, laminar stamens, staminodes, and styles contributes to this diversity. The laminar style is a derived trait in the family Cannaceae and plays an important role in pollination as its surface is used for secondary pollen presentation. Previous work in the Zingiberales has implicated YABBY2-like genes, which function in promoting laminar outgrowth, in the evolution of stamen morphology. Here, we investigate the evolution and expression of Zingiberales YABBY2-like genes in order to understand the evolution of the laminar style in Canna. Phylogenetic analyses show that multiple duplication events have occurred in this gene lineage prior to the diversification of the Zingiberales. Reverse transcription-PCR in Canna, Costus, and Musa reveals differential expression across floral organs, taxa, and gene copies, and a role for YABBY2-like genes in the evolution of the laminar style is proposed. Selection tests indicate that almost all sites in conserved domains are under purifying selection, consistent with their functional relevance, and a motif unique to monocot YABBY2-like genes is identified. These results contribute to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the evolution of floral morphologies.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.01106/fullGene ExpressionZingiberalesPlant evolutiongene evolutionFloral developmentCanna
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelsie eMorioka
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Ana M. R. Almeida
Ana M. R. Almeida
Chelsea eSpecht
spellingShingle Kelsie eMorioka
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Ana M. R. Almeida
Ana M. R. Almeida
Chelsea eSpecht
Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
Frontiers in Plant Science
Gene Expression
Zingiberales
Plant evolution
gene evolution
Floral development
Canna
author_facet Kelsie eMorioka
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Roxana eYockteng
Ana M. R. Almeida
Ana M. R. Almeida
Chelsea eSpecht
author_sort Kelsie eMorioka
title Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
title_short Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
title_full Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
title_fullStr Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
title_full_unstemmed Loss of YABBY2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in Canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the Zingiberales
title_sort loss of yabby2-like gene expression may underlie the evolution of the laminar style in canna and contribute to floral morphological diversity in the zingiberales
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2015-12-01
description The Zingiberales is an order of tropical monocots that exhibits diverse floral morphologies. The evolution of petaloid, laminar stamens, staminodes, and styles contributes to this diversity. The laminar style is a derived trait in the family Cannaceae and plays an important role in pollination as its surface is used for secondary pollen presentation. Previous work in the Zingiberales has implicated YABBY2-like genes, which function in promoting laminar outgrowth, in the evolution of stamen morphology. Here, we investigate the evolution and expression of Zingiberales YABBY2-like genes in order to understand the evolution of the laminar style in Canna. Phylogenetic analyses show that multiple duplication events have occurred in this gene lineage prior to the diversification of the Zingiberales. Reverse transcription-PCR in Canna, Costus, and Musa reveals differential expression across floral organs, taxa, and gene copies, and a role for YABBY2-like genes in the evolution of the laminar style is proposed. Selection tests indicate that almost all sites in conserved domains are under purifying selection, consistent with their functional relevance, and a motif unique to monocot YABBY2-like genes is identified. These results contribute to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the evolution of floral morphologies.
topic Gene Expression
Zingiberales
Plant evolution
gene evolution
Floral development
Canna
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.01106/full
work_keys_str_mv AT kelsieemorioka lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT roxanaeyockteng lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT roxanaeyockteng lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT roxanaeyockteng lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT anamralmeida lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT anamralmeida lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
AT chelseaespecht lossofyabby2likegeneexpressionmayunderlietheevolutionofthelaminarstyleincannaandcontributetofloralmorphologicaldiversityinthezingiberales
_version_ 1725358514154504192