Transposable elements cause the loss of self-incompatibility in citrus

  • Jianbing Hu
  • , Chenchen Liu
  • , Zezhen Du
  • , Furong Guo
  • , Dan Song
  • , Nan Wang
  • , Zhuangmin Wei
  • , Jingdong Jiang
  • , Zonghong Cao
  • , Chunmei Shi
  • , Siqi Zhang
  • , Chenqiao Zhu
  • , Peng Chen
  • , Robert M. Larkin
  • , Zongcheng Lin
  • , Qiang Xu
  • , Junli Ye
  • , Xiuxin Deng
  • , Maurice Bosch
  • , Vernonica E. Franklin-Tong
  • Lijun Chai*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Self-incompatibility (SI) is a widespread prezygotic mechanism for flowering plants to avoid inbreeding depression and promote genetic diversity. Citrus has an S-RNase-based SI system, which was frequently lost during evolution. We previously identified a single nucleotide mutation in Sm-RNase, which is responsible for the loss of SI in mandarin and its hybrids. However, little is known about other mechanisms responsible for conversion of SI to self-compatibility (SC) and we identify a completely different mechanism widely utilized by citrus. Here, we found a 786-bp miniature inverted-repeat transposable element (MITE) insertion in the promoter region of the FhiS2-RNase in Fortunella hindsii Swingle (a model plant for citrus gene function), which does not contain the Sm-RNase allele but are still SC. We demonstrate that this MITE plays a pivotal role in the loss of SI in citrus, providing evidence that this MITE insertion prevents expression of the S-RNase; moreover, transgenic experiments show that deletion of this 786-bp MITE insertion recovers the expression of FhiS2-RNase and restores SI. This study identifies the first evidence for a role for MITEs at the S-locus affecting the SI phenotype. A family-wide survey of the S-locus revealed that MITE insertions occur frequently adjacent to S-RNase alleles in different citrus genera, but only certain MITEs appear to be responsible for the loss of SI. Our study provides evidence that insertion of MITEs into a promoter region can alter a breeding strategy and suggests that this phenomenon may be broadly responsible for SC in species with the S-RNase system.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1113-1131
Number of pages19
JournalPlant Biotechnology Journal
Volume22
Issue number5
Early online date01 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 May 2024

Keywords

  • citrus
  • evolution
  • MITE
  • S-locus
  • S-RNase
  • Self-incompatibility

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