Molecular control of the floral transition in the mast seeding plant
Celmisia lyallii (Asteraceae)
Abstract
Mast flowering (or masting) is synchronous highly variable flowering
among years in populations of perennial plants. Despite having
widespread consequences for seed consumers, endangered fauna and human
health, masting is hard to predict because the underlying mechanism
regulating masting is poorly understood. Observational studies show
links to various weather patterns in different plant species, but the
molecular mechanism(s) underpinning the regulation of masting is still
not fully explained. We studied floral induction in Celmisia lyallii
(Asteraceae), a mast flowering herbaceous alpine perennial, comparing
gene expression in flowering and non-flowering plants. Differential
expression analysis showed elevated expression of ClSOC1 and ClmiR172
(promoters of flowering) in leaves of plants that subsequently flowered,
in contrast to elevated expression of ClAFT and ClTOE1 (repressors of
flowering) in leaves of plants that did not flower. The warm summer
temperatures that promoted flowering led to differential regulation of
age and hormonal pathway genes, including ClmiR172 and ClGA20ox2/8,
known to repress the expression of floral repressors and permit
flowering. Upregulated expression of epigenetic modifiers of floral
promoters also suggests that plants may maintain a novel ‘summer memory’
across the years to induce flowering. These results provide a
mechanistic understanding of floral induction in masting plants and
evidence of their ability to imprint various environmental cues to
synchronise flowering. This should allow better prediction of masting
events under climate change, thereby assisting conservation programs for
the protection of endangered fauna.