Convergent evolution of plant prickles is driven by repeated gene co-option over deep time

James W. Satterlee,David Alonso, Pietro Gramazio,Katharine M. Jenike, Jia He,Andrea Arrones, Gloria Villanueva,Mariola Plazas, Srividya Ramakrishnan,Matthias Benoit, Iacopo Gentile, Anat Hendelman,Hagai Shohat, Blaine Fitzgerald, Gina M. Robitaille, Yumi Green, Kerry Swartwood, Michael J. Passalacqua,Edeline Gagnon, Rebecca Hilgenhof,Trevis D. Huggins,Georgia C. Eizenga, Amit Gur,Twan Rutten, Nils Stein, Shengrui Yao, Clement Bellot,Mohammed Bendahmane, Amy Frary,Sandra Knapp, Tiina Särkinen,Jesse Gillis, Joyce Van Eck,Michael C. Schatz, Yuval Eshed,Jaime Prohens, Santiago Vilanova,Zachary B. Lippman

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
An enduring question in evolutionary biology concerns the degree to which episodes of convergent trait evolution depend on the same genetic programs, particularly over long timescales. Here we genetically dissected repeated origins and losses of prickles, sharp epidermal projections, that convergently evolved in numerous plant lineages. Mutations in a cytokinin hormone biosynthetic gene caused at least 16 independent losses of prickles in eggplants and wild relatives in the genus Solanum . Strikingly, homologs promote prickle formation across angiosperms that collectively diverged over 150 million years ago. By developing new Solanum genetic systems, we leveraged this discovery to eliminate prickles in a wild species and an indigenously foraged berry. Our findings implicate a shared hormone-activation genetic program underlying evolutionarily widespread and recurrent instances of plant morphological innovation. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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