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Hibiscus bullseyes reveal mechanisms controlling petal pattern proportions that influence plant-pollinator interactions.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Colorful flower patterns are key signals to attract pollinators. To produce such motifs, plants specify boundaries dividing petals into subdomains where cells develop distinctive pigmentations, shapes, and textures. While some transcription factors and biosynthetic pathways behind these characteristics are well studied, the upstream processes restricting their activities to specific petal regions remain enigmatic. Here, we unveil that the petal surface of Hibiscus trionum, an emerging model featuring a bullseye on its corolla, is prepatterned as the bullseye boundary position is specified long before it becomes visible. Using a computational model, we explore how pattern proportions are maintained while petals experience a 100-fold size increase. Exploiting transgenic lines and natural variants, we show that plants can regulate boundary position during the prepatterning phase or modulate growth on either side of this boundary later in development to vary bullseye proportions. Such modifications are functionally relevant, as buff-tailed bumblebees can reliably identify food sources based on bullseye size and prefer certain pattern proportions.

Description

Journal Title

Sci Adv

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2375-2548
2375-2548

Volume Title

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT3395/GLG)
Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT3731/GLG)
BBSRC (1943129)
Gatsby Charitable Foundation grant PTAG/022 - RG92362 (EM) and GAT3395/PR4B (HJ) Isaac Newton Trust/Wellcome Trust ISSF grant PTAG/073 - RG89529 (EM) Herchel Smith Postdoctoral Fellowship Award (LR)