ibclogo XVI International Botanical Congess


Abstract Number: 4229
Session = 13.4.2


THE EVOLUTION OF PLANT FORM: EXAMPLES FROM MAIZE


John Doebley, Plant Biology Depart., Univ. of Minnesota


Maize and its progenitor, teosinte, differ dramatically in inflorescence and plant architecture despite the fact that their evolutionary divergence occurred within the past 10,000 years. The evolution of these differences involved a small number of loci of large effect. One of these, teosinte branched1 (tb1), largely controls differences in plant architecture. We have cloned tb1. tb1 shows sequence homology to the cycloidea gene of snapdragon, which has been hypothesized to function in the regulation of transcription. Based on the pattern of tb1 expression and its mutant phenotype, tb1 is hypothesized to act in part as a repressor of organ growth. The differences in plant architecture between maize and teosinte are modeled to result from differential repression/derepression organ growth as controlled in part by tb1.


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