BIO Seminar: Lars Østergaard

Mechanisms underlying morphological diversity. Stories from the Sheppard’s Purse

Speaker: Dr. Lars Østergaard, John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK

Host: Professor Olaf Nielsen, Functional Genomics

Abstract
Evolution of gene-regulatory sequences is considered the primary driver of morphological variation. In animals, the diversity of body plans between distantly-related phyla is due to the differential expression patterns of conserved “toolkit” genes. In plants, variation in expression domains similarly underlie most of the reported diversity of organ shape both in natural evolution and in the domestication of crops. The heart-shaped fruit from members of the Capsella genus is a morphological novelty that has evolved after Capsella diverged from Arabidopsis ~8M years ago. Comparative studies of fruit growth in Capsella and Arabidopsis revealed that the difference in shape is caused by local control of anisotropic growth. Our studies show that sequence variation in regulatory domains of the fruit-tissue identity gene, INDEHISCENT (IND), is responsible for expansion of its expression domain in the heart-shaped fruits from Capsella rubella. We have demonstrated that expression of this CrIND gene in the apical part of the valves in Capsella contributes to the heart-shaped appearance. Whilst studies on morphological diversity have revealed the importance of cis¬-regulatory sequence evolution, few examples exist where the downstream effects of such variation have been characterised in detail. Here it will be demonstrated how CrIND exerts its function on Capsella fruit shape by binding sequence elements of auxin biosynthesis genes to activate their expression and ensure auxin accumulation into highly localised maxima in the fruit valves. Hence, the data presented provide a direct link between changes in expression pattern and altered hormone homeostasis in the evolution of morphological novelty.