TY - JOUR T1 - Shared characteristics underpinning C<sub>4</sub> leaf maturation derived from analysis of multiple C<sub>3</sub> and C<sub>4</sub> species of <em>Flaveria</em> JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/088153 SP - 088153 AU - Britta M.C. Kümpers AU - Steven J. Burgess AU - Ivan Reyna-Llorens AU - Richard Smith-Unna AU - Chris Boursnell AU - Julian M. Hibberd Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/11/16/088153.abstract N2 - Most terrestrial plants use C3 photosynthesis to fix carbon. In multiple plant lineages a modified system known as C4 photosynthesis has evolved. To better understand the molecular patterns associated with induction of C4 photosynthesis the genus Flaveria that contains C3 and C4 species was used. A base to tip maturation gradient of leaf anatomy was defined, and RNA sequencing was undertaken along this gradient for two C3 and two C4 Flaveria species. Key C4 traits including vein density, mesophyll and bundle sheath cross-sectional area, chloroplast ultrastructure, and abundance of transcripts encoding proteins of C4 photosynthesis were quantified. Candidate genes underlying each of these C4 characteristics were identified. Principal Components Analysis indicated that leaf maturation and then photosynthetic pathway were responsible for the greatest amount of variation in transcript abundance. Photosynthesis genes were over-represented for a prolonged period in the C4 species. Through comparison with publically available datasets we identify a small number of transcriptional regulators that have been up-regulated in diverse C4 species. The analysis identifies similar patterns of expression in independent C4 lineages and so indicates that the complex C4 pathway is associated with parallel as well as convergent evolution.Highlight We identify transcription factors that show conserved patterns of expression in multiple 29 C4 species, both within the Flaveria genus, but also in more distantly related C4 plants. ER -