comparative genomic analysis of soybean flowering genes大豆开花基因的比较基因组分析.pdf
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Comparative Genomic Analysis of Soybean Flowering
Genes
Chol-Hee Jung, Chui E. Wong, Mohan B. Singh, Prem L. Bhalla*
Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Laboratory, ARC Centre of Excellence for Integrative Legume Research, Melbourne School of Land and Environment, The
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia
Abstract
Flowering is an important agronomic trait that determines crop yield. Soybean is a major oilseed legume crop used for
human and animal feed. Legumes have unique vegetative and floral complexities. Our understanding of the molecular basis
of flower initiation and development in legumes is limited. Here, we address this by using a computational approach to
examine flowering regulatory genes in the soybean genome in comparison to the most studied model plant, Arabidopsis.
For this comparison, a genome-wide analysis of orthologue groups was performed, followed by an in silico gene expression
analysis of the identified soybean flowering genes. Phylogenetic analyses of the gene families highlighted the evolutionary
relationships among these candidates. Our study identified key flowering genes in soybean and indicates that the
vernalisation and the ambient-temperature pathways seem to be the most variant in soybean. A comparison of the
orthologue groups containing flowering genes indicated that, on average, each Arabidopsis flowering gene has 2-3
orthologous copies in soybean. Our analysis highlighted that the CDF3, VRN1, SVP, AP3 and PIF3 genes are paralogue-rich
genes in soybean. Furthermore, the genome mapping of the soybean flowering genes showed that these genes are
scattered randomly across the genome. A paralogue comparison indicated that the soybean genes comprising the largest
orthologue group are clustered in a 1.4 Mb
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