The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)

In this thesis, I used Lathyrus to study floral colour evolution. My work builds on that of pioneer geneticists who used the sweet pea (Lathyrus odoratus) for research in early 20th century England. They used the rich horticultural resource of inbred cultivars for genetic study. More recently, studi...

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Main Author: Xue , Xinxin
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56243
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-562432018-01-05T17:28:45Z The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae) Xue , Xinxin In this thesis, I used Lathyrus to study floral colour evolution. My work builds on that of pioneer geneticists who used the sweet pea (Lathyrus odoratus) for research in early 20th century England. They used the rich horticultural resource of inbred cultivars for genetic study. More recently, studies on flavonoid biochemistry and the phylogenetics of Lathyrus lend tools to place the colour shifts in an evolutionary and molecular context. In chapter 2, I show that the A1 locus is a missense mutation (332 G/A) in the substrate recognition site (SRS1) of flavonoid 3’,5’-hydroxylase (F3’5’H) and is associated with the pink mutant cultivar ‘Painted Lady’ (‘PL’). This single base pair substitution in the mutant F3’5’H is speculated to toggle the enzyme from primary F3’5’H activity to a relatively efficient F3’H, as shown in a heterologous transformation in Arabidopsis PAP1D (a mutant line that produces anthocyanin constitutively). In chapter 3, I constructed a multi-species coalescent tree using Bayesian inference and reconstructed the ancestral states for floral colour, life history trait (perennial or annual) and floral pattern. The ancestral states for Lathyrus are anthocyanin rich (AR), annual and concolourous. However, no correlation was found between the life history trait (which is linked to breeding systems) and the loss of anthocyanin colour in the petal, when corrected for phylogenetic independence. This suggests that in Lathyrus, autogamous species are as colourful as allogamous ones even though the latter are expected to need greater floral display. In chapter 4, I found that the lack of expression in dihydroflavonol reductase (DFR) was associated with a white mutant cultivar ‘Mrs Collier’ (‘MC’) of L. odoratus via a trans-regulatory machinery. Two transcription factors, the sweet pea orthologues of AN2 (MYB) and AN1 (bHLH) were also not expressed although neither was associated with the white phenotype in an F2-cosegregation analysis. This DFR silencing was also observed in another white mutant of the domesticated grass pea (L. sativus). In contrast, when unpigmented wild species originate under natural selection, DFR expression, if at all affected, is lowered rather than fully silenced, likely due to pleiotropic effects. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate 2016-01-05T22:54:09Z 2016-01-06T02:20:38 2015 2016-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56243 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description In this thesis, I used Lathyrus to study floral colour evolution. My work builds on that of pioneer geneticists who used the sweet pea (Lathyrus odoratus) for research in early 20th century England. They used the rich horticultural resource of inbred cultivars for genetic study. More recently, studies on flavonoid biochemistry and the phylogenetics of Lathyrus lend tools to place the colour shifts in an evolutionary and molecular context. In chapter 2, I show that the A1 locus is a missense mutation (332 G/A) in the substrate recognition site (SRS1) of flavonoid 3’,5’-hydroxylase (F3’5’H) and is associated with the pink mutant cultivar ‘Painted Lady’ (‘PL’). This single base pair substitution in the mutant F3’5’H is speculated to toggle the enzyme from primary F3’5’H activity to a relatively efficient F3’H, as shown in a heterologous transformation in Arabidopsis PAP1D (a mutant line that produces anthocyanin constitutively). In chapter 3, I constructed a multi-species coalescent tree using Bayesian inference and reconstructed the ancestral states for floral colour, life history trait (perennial or annual) and floral pattern. The ancestral states for Lathyrus are anthocyanin rich (AR), annual and concolourous. However, no correlation was found between the life history trait (which is linked to breeding systems) and the loss of anthocyanin colour in the petal, when corrected for phylogenetic independence. This suggests that in Lathyrus, autogamous species are as colourful as allogamous ones even though the latter are expected to need greater floral display. In chapter 4, I found that the lack of expression in dihydroflavonol reductase (DFR) was associated with a white mutant cultivar ‘Mrs Collier’ (‘MC’) of L. odoratus via a trans-regulatory machinery. Two transcription factors, the sweet pea orthologues of AN2 (MYB) and AN1 (bHLH) were also not expressed although neither was associated with the white phenotype in an F2-cosegregation analysis. This DFR silencing was also observed in another white mutant of the domesticated grass pea (L. sativus). In contrast, when unpigmented wild species originate under natural selection, DFR expression, if at all affected, is lowered rather than fully silenced, likely due to pleiotropic effects. === Science, Faculty of === Botany, Department of === Graduate
author Xue , Xinxin
spellingShingle Xue , Xinxin
The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
author_facet Xue , Xinxin
author_sort Xue , Xinxin
title The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
title_short The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
title_full The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
title_fullStr The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
title_full_unstemmed The molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in Lathyrus L. (Fabaceae)
title_sort molecular evolution of floral colour shifts in lathyrus l. (fabaceae)
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56243
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AT xuexinxin molecularevolutionoffloralcolourshiftsinlathyruslfabaceae
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