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Natural variation in the C‐repeat binding factor cold response pathway correlates with local adaptation of Arabidopsis ecotypes
Author(s) -
Gehan Malia A.,
Park Sunchung,
Gilmour Sarah J.,
An Chuanfu,
Lee ChinMei,
Thomashow Michael F.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/tpj.13027
Subject(s) - ecotype , arabidopsis , regulon , biology , local adaptation , locus (genetics) , arabidopsis thaliana , gene , adaptation (eye) , genetics , botany , regulation of gene expression , mutant , neuroscience , population , demography , sociology
Summary The natural range of Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis) encompasses geographical regions that have greatly differing local climates, including harshness of winter temperatures. A question thus raised is whether differences in freezing tolerance might contribute to local adaptation in Arabidopsis. Consistent with this possibility is that Arabidopsis accessions differ in freezing tolerance and that those collected from colder northern latitudes are generally more tolerant to freezing than those collected from warmer southern latitudes. Moreover, recent studies with Arabidopsis genotypes collected from sites in Sweden ( SW ) and Italy ( IT ) have established that the two accessions are locally adapted, that the SW ecotype is more tolerant of freezing than the IT ecotype, and that genetic differences between the two ecotypes that condition local adaptation and freezing tolerance map to a region that includes the C‐repeat binding factor ( CBF ) locus. The CBF locus includes three genes – CBF 1 , CBF 2 and CBF 3 – that are induced by low temperature and encode transcription factors that regulate a group of more than 100 genes, the CBF regulon, which impart freezing tolerance. Here we show that cold induction of most CBF regulon genes is lower in IT plants compared with SW plants, and that this is due to the IT CBF 2 gene encoding a non‐functional CBF 2 protein. The non‐functional IT CBF 2 protein also contributes to the lower freezing tolerance of the IT plants compared with the SW plants. Taken together, studies on the SW and IT ecotypes provide evidence that natural variation in the CBF pathway has contributed to adaptive evolution in these Arabidopsis populations.