Purugganan MD, Rounsley SD et al. 1995
- Authors: Purugganan MD, Rounsley SD, Schmidt RJ, Yanofsky MF
- Title: MOLECULAR EVOLUTION OF FLOWER DEVELOPMENT - DIVERSIFICATION OF
THE PLANT
MADS-BOX REGULATORY GENE FAMILY
- Location: Genetics 1995 May;140(1):345-356
- Abstract: Floral homeotic genes that control the specification of
meristem and
organ identity in developing flowers have been isolated from both
Arabidopsis thaliana and Antirrhinum majus. Most of
these genes belong to a large family of regulatory genes and possess a
characteristic DNA binding domain known as the MADS-box. Members of this
gene family display primarily floral-specific expression and are
homologous to transcription factors found in several animal and fungal
species. Molecular evolutionary analyses reveal that there are
appreciable differences in the substitution rates between different
domains of these plant MADS-box genes. Phylogenetic analyses also
demonstrate that members of the plant MADS-box gene family are organized
into several distinct gene groups: the AGAMOUS, APETALA3/PISTILLATA and
APETALA1/AGL9 groups. The shared evolutionary history of members of a
gene group appear to reflect the distinct functional roles these MADS-box
genes play in flower development. Molecular evolutionary analyses also
suggest that these different gene groups were established in a relatively
short span of evolutionary time and that the various floral homeotic loci
originated even before the appearance of the flowering plants.
This page is part of the
Snapdragon Home Page.
The URL of the Snapdragon Home Page is
http://www.mpiz-koeln.mpg.de/snapdragon/snapdragon.html
If you have any comments, additions or corrections to this page of general
interest you are invited to use the
Snapdragon Guest Book.
For personal comments please write to the author(s) of this page or to
Kurt Stueber.
This page has last been modified on May 26, 1997.