A retrotransposon insertion in the Mao1 promoter results in erect pubescence and higher yield in soybean.
Jie AnChao FangZhihui YuanQuan HuWenxuan HuangHaiyang LiRuirui MaLingshuang WangTong SuShichen LiLindong WangYan DuanYongqi WangChunbao ZhangRan XuDajian ZhangYuman CaoJingjing HouFanjiang KongLianjun SunPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Adaptive changes in crops contribute to the diversity of agronomic traits, which directly or indirectly affect yield. The change of pubescence form from appressed to erect is a notable feature during soybean domestication. However, the biological significance and regulatory mechanism underlying this transformation remain largely unknown. Here, we identified a major-effect locus, PUBESCENCE FORM 1 ( PF1 ), the upstream region of Mao1 , that regulates pubescence form in soybean. The insertion of a Ty3/ Gypsy retrotransposon in PF1 can recruit the transcription factor GAGA-binding protein to a GA-rich region, which up-regulates Mao1 expression, underpinning soybean pubescence evolution. Interestingly, the proportion of improved cultivars with erect pubescence increases gradually with increasing latitude, and erect-pubescence cultivars have a higher yield possibly through a higher photosynthetic rate and photosynthetic stability. These findings open an avenue for molecular breeding through either natural introgression or genome editing toward yield improvement and productivity.