373-6 Parallel Domestication of the Sh1 Genes in Cereals.

See more from this Division: C07 Genomics, Molecular Genetics & Biotechnology
See more from this Session: Molecular Biology, Biotechnology & QTLs for Crop Improvement
Wednesday, October 24, 2012: 2:20 PM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Room 207, Level 2
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Zhongwei Lin1, Xianran Li1, Laura Shannon2, Cheng-Ting Yeh3, Ming Li Wang4, Guihua Bai5, Zhao Peng6, Jiarui Li6, Harold Trick6, Thomas Clemente7, John Doebley2, Patrick S. Schnable3, Mitchell Tuinstra8, Tesfaye Tesso1, Frank White6 and Jianming Yu1, (1)Agronomy, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS
(2)University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
(3)Iowa State University, Ames, IA
(4)USDA-ARS, PGRCU, Griffin, GA
(5)USDA-ARS, HWWGRU, Manhattan, KS
(6)Dept. of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS
(7)Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
(8)Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
Cereal crops, the primary calorie source for humans, were domesticated thousands of years ago. A key step during crop domestication is the loss of seed shattering. Here we show that seed shattering in sorghum is controlled by a single gene, SHATTERING1 (Sh1), which encodes a YABBY transcription factor. Domesticated sorghums harbor three different mutations at the Sh1 locus. Variants at regulatory sites in the promoter and intronic regions lead to a low level of expression, a 2.2-kb fragment deletion causes a truncated transcript that lacks the second and third exons, and a “GT” to “GG” splicing variant in the fourth intron removes the fourth exon. The distributions of these non-shattering haplotypes among sorghum landraces suggest three independent origins. The function of the rice ortholog (OsSh1) was subsequently validated with a shattering resistant mutant, and two maize orthologs (ZmSh1-1 and ZmSh1-5.1+ZmSh1-5.2) were verified with a large mapping population. Our results indicate that Sh1 genes for seed shattering were under parallel selection during sorghum, rice, and maize domestication.
See more from this Division: C07 Genomics, Molecular Genetics & Biotechnology
See more from this Session: Molecular Biology, Biotechnology & QTLs for Crop Improvement