iScience (Jul 2022)

Circadian-period variation underlies the local adaptation of photoperiodism in the short-day plant Lemna aequinoctialis

  • Tomoaki Muranaka,
  • Shogo Ito,
  • Hiroshi Kudoh,
  • Tokitaka Oyama

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 7
p. 104634

Abstract

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Summary: Phenotypic variation is the basis for trait adaptation via evolutionary selection. However, the driving forces behind quantitative trait variations remain unclear owing to their complexity at the molecular level. This study focused on the natural variation of the free-running period (FRP) of the circadian clock because FRP is a determining factor of the phase phenotype of clock-dependent physiology. Lemna aequinoctialis in Japan is a paddy field duckweed that exhibits a latitudinal cline of critical day length (CDL) for short-day flowering. We collected 72 strains of L. aequinoctialis and found a significant correlation between FRPs and locally adaptive CDLs, confirming that variation in the FRP-dependent phase phenotype underlies photoperiodic adaptation. Diel transcriptome analysis revealed that the induction timing of an FT gene is key to connecting the clock phase to photoperiodism at the molecular level. This study highlights the importance of FRP as a variation resource for evolutionary adaptation.

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