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Adaptation to climate through flowering phenology: a case study in Medicago truncatula
Author(s) -
Burgarella Concetta,
Chantret Nathalie,
Gay Laurène,
Prosperi JeanMarie,
Bonhomme Maxime,
Tiffin Peter,
Young Nevin D.,
Ronfort Joelle
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
molecular ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.619
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1365-294X
pISSN - 0962-1083
DOI - 10.1111/mec.13683
Subject(s) - biology , phenology , candidate gene , adaptation (eye) , medicago truncatula , local adaptation , gene , trait , quantitative trait locus , altitude (triangle) , evolutionary biology , ecology , genetics , population , demography , geometry , mathematics , symbiosis , neuroscience , sociology , bacteria , computer science , programming language
Abstract Local climatic conditions likely constitute an important selective pressure on genes underlying important fitness‐related traits such as flowering time, and in many species, flowering phenology and climatic gradients strongly covary. To test whether climate shapes the genetic variation on flowering time genes and to identify candidate flowering genes involved in the adaptation to environmental heterogeneity, we used a large Medicago truncatula core collection to examine the association between nucleotide polymorphisms at 224 candidate genes and both climate variables and flowering phenotypes. Unlike genome‐wide studies, candidate gene approaches are expected to enrich for the number of meaningful trait associations because they specifically target genes that are known to affect the trait of interest. We found that flowering time mediates adaptation to climatic conditions mainly by variation at genes located upstream in the flowering pathways, close to the environmental stimuli. Variables related to the annual precipitation regime reflected selective constraints on flowering time genes better than the other variables tested (temperature, altitude, latitude or longitude). By comparing phenotype and climate associations, we identified 12 flowering genes as the most promising candidates responsible for phenological adaptation to climate. Four of these genes were located in the known flowering time QTL region on chromosome 7. However, climate and flowering associations also highlighted largely distinct gene sets, suggesting different genetic architectures for adaptation to climate and flowering onset.

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