Paternally Imprinted LATE-FLOWERING2 Transcription Factor Contributes to Paternal-Excess Interploidy Hybridization Barriers in Wheat.
Guanghui YangMan FengKuohai YuGuangxian CuiYan ZhouLv SunLulu GaoYumei ZhangHuiru PengYingyin YaoZhaorong HuVincenzo RossiIve De SmetZhongfu NiQixin SunMingming XinPublished in: Journal of integrative plant biology (2023)
Interploidy hybridization between hexaploid and tetraploid genotypes occurred repeatedly during genomic introgression events throughout wheat evolution, and is commonly employed in wheat breeding programs. Hexaploid wheat usually serves as maternal parent because the reciprocal cross generates progeny with severe defects and poor seed germination, but the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we performed detailed analysis of phenotypic variation in endosperm between two interploidy reciprocal crosses arising from tetraploid (Triticum durum, AABB) and hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum, AABBDD). In the paternal- vs. the maternal-excess cross, the timing of endosperm cellularization was delayed and starch granule accumulation in the endosperm was repressed, causing reduced germination percentage. The expression profiles of genes involved in nutrient metabolism differed strongly between these endosperm types. Furthermore, expression patterns of parental alleles were dramatically disturbed in interploidy vs. intraploidy crosses, leading to increased number of imprinted genes. The endosperm-specific TaLFL2 showed a paternally imprinted expression pattern in interploidy crosses partially due to allele-specific DNA methylation. Paternal TaLFL2 binds to and represses a nutrient accumulation regulator TaNAC019, leading to reduced storage protein and starch accumulation during endosperm development in paternal excess cross, as confirmed by interploidy crosses between tetraploid wild-type and CRISPR-Cas9 generated hexaploid mutants. These findings reveal a contribution of genomic imprinting to paternal excess interploidy hybridization barriers during wheat evolution history and explains why experienced breeders preferentially exploit maternal excess interploidy crosses in wheat breeding programs. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.