![]() The rapid origin and diversification of the angiosperm flower during evolution is still a scientific mystery. To solve it may require exploration of the genetic basis of reproductive organ formation in the putative sister group of the angiosperms, extant gymnosperms. Unfortunately, all extant gymnosperms are woody plants that require many years to enter the reproductive stage and hence are not easy to investigate. However, a unique opportunity to study the developmental genetics of gymnosperms is provided by two segregating populations of the natural homeotic and heterochronic spruce variety 'Acrocona', which is characterized by the precocious development of female cones at wrong, i.e. terminal positions of shoots, and by the occasional development of hermaphroditic cones. In this project we compare the expression patterns of orthologues and close relatives of flower developmental control genes in mutant and wild-type plants of one of the populations segregating for Acrocona in order to get deeper insights into the molecular genetic basis of reproductive development in a gymnosperm. In addition, we locate a selected subset of these genes on a spruce chromosomal linkage map generated with the other Acrocona population.
Grant: TH 417/8-1 of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) This project is realised in cooperation with a group at the Johann Heinrich von Thünen-Institute in Großhansdorf near Hamburg (Dr. Matthias Fladung, Institute of Forest Genetics) Suggested reading: Melzer, R., Wang, Y.Q. and Theißen, G. (2010) The naked and the dead: the ABCs of gymnosperm reproduction and the origin of the angiosperm flower. Sem Cell Dev Biol 21, 118-128 Theißen, G. and Becker, A. (2004) Gymnosperm orthologues of class B floral homeotic genes and their impact on understanding flower origin. Crit Rev Plant Sci 23, 129-148 |