<b>The control of carpel determinacy pathway leads to sex determination</b> <b>in cucurbits</b>.
Siqi ZhangFeng-Quan TanChing-Hui ChungFilip SlavkovicRavi-Sureshbhai DevaniChristelle TroadecFabien MarcelHalima MorinCéline CampsMaria Victoria Gomez RoldanMoussa BenhamedCatherine DogimontAdnane BoualemAbdelhafid BendahmanePublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Male and female unisexual flowers evolved from hermaphroditic ancestors, and control of flower sex is useful for plant breeding. We isolated a female-to-male sex transition mutant in melon and identified the causal gene as the carpel identity gene <i>CRABS CLAW (CRC)</i>. We show that the master regulator of sex determination in cucurbits, the transcription factor <i>WIP1</i> whose expression orchestrates male flower development, recruits the corepressor TOPLESS to the <i>CRC</i> promoter to suppress its expression through histone deacetylation. Impairing TOPLESS-WIP1 physical interaction leads to <i>CRC</i> expression, carpel determination, and consequently the expression of the stamina inhibitor, the aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthase 7 (<i>CmACS7</i>), leading to female flower development. Our findings suggest that sex genes evolved to interfere with flower meristematic function, leading to unisexual flower development.