Dioecy in Amborella trichopoda: evidence for genetically based sex determination and its consequences for inferences of the breeding system in early angiosperms
2017
Anger, Nicolas | Fogliani, Bruno | Scutt, C.P. | Gateble, Gildas | Institut Agronomique Néo-Calédonien (IAC) | University of New Caledonia | Reproduction et développement des plantes (RDP) ; École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon) ; Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL) ; Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) | Fondation Ars-Cuttoli-Paul Appell; ANR DS052 | ANR-14-CE19-0021,NGSex,UNE APPROCHE NGS POUR ETUDIER LES CHROMOSOMES SEXUELS DE PLANTES(2014)
Background and Aims This work aimed to gain insight into the breeding system at the base of living angiosperms through both character state reconstructions and the study of sex ratios and phenotypes in the likely sister to all other living angiosperms, Amborella trichopoda. Methods Sex phenotypes were mapped onto a phylogeny of basally diverging angiosperms using maximum parsimony. In parallel, sex ratios and phenotypes were studied over two consecutive flowering seasons in an ex situ population of A. trichopoda, while the sex ratio of an in situ population was also assessed. Key Results Parsimony analyses failed to resolve the breeding system present at the base of living angiosperms, but indicated the importance of A. trichopoda for the future elucidation of this question. The ex situ A. trichopoda population studied showed a primary sex ratio close to 1:1, though sex ratio bias was found in the in situ population studied. Instances of sexual instability were quantified in both populations. Conclusions Sex ratio data support the presence of genetic sex determination in A. trichopoda, whose further elucidation may guide inferences on the breeding system at the base of living angiosperms. Sexual instability in A. trichopoda suggests the operation of epigenetic mechanisms, and the evolution of dioecy via a gynodioecious intermediate.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]