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Leaf shape in Populus tremula is a complex, omnigenic trait.
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  • Niklas Mähler,
  • Bastian Schiffthaler,
  • Kathryn Robinson,
  • Barbara Terebieniec,
  • Matej Vucak,
  • Mark Bailey,
  • Chanaka Mannapperume,
  • Stefan Jansson,
  • Torgeir R Hvidsten,
  • Nathaniel Street
Niklas Mähler
Umeå University

Corresponding Author:niklas.mahler@umu.se

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Bastian Schiffthaler
Umeå University
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Kathryn Robinson
Umeå University
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Barbara Terebieniec
Umeå University
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Matej Vucak
University of Glasgow
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Mark Bailey
University of Glasgow
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Chanaka Mannapperume
Umeå University
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Stefan Jansson
Umeå University
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Torgeir R Hvidsten
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
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Nathaniel Street
Umeå University, Umeå University
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Abstract

Leaf shape is a defining feature of how we recognise and classify plant species. Although there is extensive variation in leaf shape within many species, few studies have disentangled the underlying genetic architecture. We characterised the genetic architecture of leaf shape variation in Eurasian aspen (Populus tremula L.) by performing a genome wide association studies (GWAS) for physiognomy traits. To ascertain the roles of identified GWAS candidate genes within the leaf development transcriptional program, we performed gene co-expression network analyses from a developmental series, which is publicly available at http://aspleaf.plantgenie.org. We additionally used gene expression measurements across the population to analyse GWAS candidate genes in the context of a population-wide co-expression network and to identify genes that were differentially expressed between groups of individuals with contrasting leaf shapes. These data were integrated with expression GWAS (eQTL) results to define a set of candidate genes associated with leaf shape variation. Our results identified no clear adaptive link to leaf shape variation and indicate that leaf shape traits are genetically complex, likely determined by numerous small-effect variations in gene expression. Genes associated with shape variation were peripheral within the population-wide co-expression network, were not highly connected within the leaf development co-expression network and exhibited signatures of relaxed selection. As such, our results are consistent with the omnigenic model.