TY - JOUR A1 - Hilker, Monika A1 - Schwachtje, Jens A1 - Baier, Margarete A1 - Balazadeh, Salma A1 - Bäurle, Isabel A1 - Geiselhardt, Sven A1 - Hincha, Dirk K. A1 - Kunze, Reinhard A1 - Mueller-Roeber, Bernd A1 - Rillig, Matthias G. A1 - Rolff, Jens A1 - Schmülling, Thomas A1 - Steppuhn, Anke A1 - van Dongen, Joost A1 - Whitcomb, Sarah J. A1 - Wurst, Susanne A1 - Zuther, Ellen A1 - Kopka, Joachim T1 - Priming and memory of stress responses in organisms lacking a nervous system JF - Biological reviews KW - priming KW - stress signalling KW - epigenetics KW - memory KW - fitness KW - stress tolerance KW - defence KW - bet hedging Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.12215 SN - 1464-7931 SN - 1469-185X VL - 91 SP - 1118 EP - 1133 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sas, Claudia A1 - Mueller, Frank A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Kent, Tyler V. A1 - Wright, Stephen I. A1 - Hilker, Monika A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Repeated Inactivation of the First Committed Enzyme Underlies the Loss of Benzaldehyde Emission after the Selfing Transition in Capsella JF - Current biology N2 - The enormous species richness of flowering plants is at least partly due to floral diversification driven by interactions between plants and their animal pollinators [1, 2]. Specific pollinator attraction relies on visual and olfactory floral cues [3-5]; floral scent can not only attract pollinators but also attract or repel herbivorous insects [6-8]. However, despite its central role for plant-animal interactions, the genetic control of floral scent production and its evolutionary modification remain incompletely understood [9-13]. Benzenoids are an important class of floral scent compounds that are generated from phenylalanine via several enzymatic pathways [14-17]. Here we address the genetic basis of the loss of floral scent associated with the transition from outbreeding to selfing in the genus Capsella. While the outbreeding C. grandiflora emits benzaldehyde as a major constituent of its floral scent, this has been lost in the selfing C. rubella. We identify the Capsella CNL1 gene encoding cinnamate: CoA ligase as responsible for this variation. Population genetic analysis indicates that CNL1 has been inactivated twice independently in C. rubella via different novel mutations to its coding sequence. Together with a recent study in Petunia [18], this identifies cinnamate: CoA ligase as an evolutionary hotspot for mutations causing the loss of benzenoid scent compounds in association with a shift in the reproductive strategy of Capsella from pollination by insects to self-fertilization. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.026 SN - 0960-9822 SN - 1879-0445 VL - 26 SP - 3313 EP - 3319 PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER -