Conifers normally go through a long juvenile period, for Norway spruce (Picea abies) around 20 to 25 years, before developing male and female cones. We have grown plants from inbred crosses of a naturally occurring spruce mutant (acrocona). One-fourth of the segregating acrocona plants initiate cones already in their second growth cycle, suggesting control by a single locus. The early cone-setting properties of the acrocona mutant were utilized to identify candidate genes involved in vegetative-toreproductive phase change in Norway spruce. Poly(A+) RNA samples from apical and basal shoots of cone-setting and noncone- setting plants were subjected to high-throughput sequencing (RNA-seq). We assembled and investigated 33,383 expressed putative protein-coding acrocona transcripts. Eight transcripts were differentially expressed between selected sample pairs. One of these (Acr42124_1) was significantly up-regulated in apical shoot samples from cone-setting acrocona plants, and the encoded protein belongs to the MADS box gene family of transcription factors. Using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction with independently derived plant material, we confirmed that the MADS box gene is up-regulated in both needles and buds of cone-inducing shoots when reproductive identity is determined. Our results constitute important steps for the development of a rapid cycling model system that can be used to study gene function in conifers. In addition, our data suggest the involvement of a MADS box transcription factor in the vegetative-to-reproductive phase change in Norway spruce.
CITATION STYLE
Uddenberg, D., Reimegård, J., Clapham, D., Almqvist, C., Von Arnold, S., Emanuelsson, O., & Sundström, J. F. (2013). Early cone setting in picea abies acrocona is associated with increased transcriptional activity of a MADS box transcription factor. Plant Physiology, 161(2), 813–823. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.112.207746
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