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Article
Stability of Single-Parent Gene Expression Complementation in Maize Hybrids upon Water Deficit Stress
Plant Physiology
  • Caroline Marcon, University of Bonn
  • Anja Paschold, University of Bonn
  • Waqas Ahmed Malik, University of Hohenheim
  • Andrew Lithio, Iowa State University
  • Jutta A. Baldauf, University of Bonn
  • Lena Altrogge, University of Bonn
  • Nina Opitz, University of Bonn
  • Christa Lanz, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology
  • Heiko Schoof, University of Bonn
  • Dan Nettleton, Iowa State University
  • Hans-Peter Piepho, University of Hohenheim
  • Frank Hochholdinger, University of Bonn
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
2-1-2017
DOI
10.1104/pp.16.01045
Abstract

Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrids compared with their homozygous, genetically distinct parents. In this study, we monitored the transcriptomic divergence of the maize (Zea mays) inbred lines B73 and Mo17 and their reciprocal F1 hybrid progeny in primary roots under control and water deficit conditions simulated by polyethylene glycol treatment. Single-parent expression (SPE) of genes is an extreme instance of gene expression complementation, in which genes are active in only one of two parents but are expressed in both reciprocal hybrids. In this study, 1,997 genes only expressed in B73 and 2,024 genes only expressed in Mo17 displayed SPE complementation under control and water deficit conditions. As a consequence, the number of active genes in hybrids exceeded the number of active genes in the parental inbred lines significantly independent of treatment. SPE patterns were substantially more stable to expression changes by water deficit treatment than other genotype-specific expression profiles. While, on average, 75% of all SPEpatterns were not altered in response to polyethylene glycol treatment, only 17% of the remaining genotype-specific expression patterns were not changed by water deficit. Nonsyntenic genes that lack syntenic orthologs in other grass species, and thus evolved late in the grass lineage, were significantly overrepresented among SPE genes. Hence, the significant overrepresentation of nonsyntenic genes among SPE patterns and their stability under water limitation might suggest a function of these genes during the early developmental manifestation of heterosis under fluctuating environmental conditions in hybrid progeny of the inbred lines B73 and Mo17.

Comments

This article is published as Marcon, Caroline, Anja Paschold, Waqas Ahmed Malik, Andrew Lithio, Jutta A. Baldauf, Lena Altrogge, Nina Opitz et al. "Stability of single-parent gene expression complementation in maize hybrids upon water deficit stress." Plant physiology 173, no. 2 (2017): 1247-1257. doi: 10.1104/pp.16.01045. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
American Society of Plant Biologists
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Caroline Marcon, Anja Paschold, Waqas Ahmed Malik, Andrew Lithio, et al.. "Stability of Single-Parent Gene Expression Complementation in Maize Hybrids upon Water Deficit Stress" Plant Physiology Vol. 173 Iss. 2 (2017) p. 1247 - 1257
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/dan-nettleton/111/