# Artificial Selection on the GA2ox Gene Family Contributes to Plant Architecture Improvement in Upland Cotton

**Authors:** Tao Wang, Juwu Gong, Ke Xu, Shuqian Yao, Haoliang Yan, Youlu Yuan, Haihong Shang, Gangling Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms27052219 · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

The study identifies GA2ox genes in cotton that were selected during domestication to improve plant architecture, particularly plant height.

## Contribution

The study identifies GA2ox genes, particularly GhGA2ox31, as key regulators of plant height under artificial selection in cotton.

## Key findings

- Nine GA2ox genes showed strong artificial selection during cotton domestication.
- The Hap2 allele of GhGA2ox31 is enriched in shorter cotton plants and increases gene expression.
- Functional validation in Arabidopsis confirms GA2ox genes regulate plant height.

## Abstract

Gibberellins (GAs) play a crucial regulatory role in the growth and development of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Through bioinformatics analyses, we identified a total of 39 GA2ox genes (encoding gibberellin 2-oxidases) in the cotton genome, designated GhGA2ox1 to GhGA2ox39. Based on phylogenetic analysis, these genes were classified into five groups. We further examined their gene structures, conserved motifs, and chromosomal distributions, revealing that members within the same group shared similar structural and motif organizations. Collinearity and cis-element analyses provided important insights into the evolutionary history and regulatory potential of the GA2ox gene family in cotton. Notably, using nucleotide diversity (π) and population differentiation (FST) analyses across the entire family, we screened and identified nine candidate genes that underwent strong artificial selection during cotton domestication and improvement. Further haplotype-phenotype association analysis identified GH_D09G0919 (GhGA2ox31) as a key regulator of Plant Height (PH). To validate their regulatory roles, we analyzed the genotype distribution in accessions with extreme phenotypes. The results revealed divergent selection histories for these two loci: the favorable allele of GH_D01G0720 (GhGA2ox23) was already fixed in the tested population, whereas GH_D09G0919 maintained significant natural variation. Specifically, the Hap2 allele of GH_D09G0919 was significantly enriched in the shortest accessions compared to the tallest ones. Importantly, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) analysis confirmed that the Hap2 allele drives significantly higher gene expression in leaves, suggesting that enhanced GA catabolism underlies the compact phenotype. Additionally, transcriptomic profiling revealed the tissue-specific expression patterns of candidate genes, implying their functional roles in development. Furthermore, functional validation using the Arabidopsis mutant of the homologous gene (AtGA2ox8) confirmed its conserved role in regulating plant height, as the mutant exhibited a distinct short-stature phenotype. These results uncover valuable genetic resources for molecular breeding to shape compact cotton architecture. Collectively, this study aims to analyze the evolutionary patterns of the cotton GA2ox gene family and to identify key genes that regulate plant height under artificial selection, providing theoretical support for molecular breeding of compact plant types.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** LOC105048141 (gibberellin 2-beta-dioxygenase 1) [NCBI Gene 105048141], GA2OX8 (gibberellin 2-oxidase 8) [NCBI Gene 827868]
- **Species:** Gossypium hirsutum (taxon 3635), Arabidopsis (taxon 3701)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** short-stature (MESH:D006130)
- **Chemicals:** GA (MESH:D005708), Gibberellins (MESH:D005875)
- **Species:** Arabidopsis thaliana (mouse-ear cress, species) [taxon 3702], Gossypium hirsutum (American cotton, species) [taxon 3635]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12984388/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12984388