Petunia belongs to the family of the Solanaceae and is closely
related to important crop species such as tomato, potato, eggplant,
pepper and tobacco. With around 35 species described it is one of
the smaller genera and among those there are two groups of species
that make up the majority of them: the purple flowered
P.integrifolia group and the white flowered P.axillaris group. It
is assumed that interspecific hybrids between members of these two
groups have laid the foundation for the huge variation in cultivars
as selected from the 1830 s onwards.
Petunia thus has been a commercially important ornamental since
the early days of horticulture. Despite that, Petunia was in use as
a research model only parsimoniously until the late fifties of the
last century. By then seed companies started to fund academic
research, initially with the main aim to develop new color
varieties. Besides a moment of glory around 1980 (being elected a
promising model system, just prior to the Arabidopsis boom),
Petunia has long been a system in the shadow. Up to the early
eighties no more then five groups developed classical and
biochemical genetics, almost exclusively on flower color genes.
Then from the early eighties onward, interest has slowly been
growing and nowadays some 20-25 academic groups around the world
are using Petunia as their main model system for a variety of
research purposes, while a number of smaller and larger companies
are developing further new varieties.
At present the system is gaining credibility for a number of
reasons, a very important one being that it is now generally
realized that only comparative biology will reveal the real roots
of evolutionary development of processes like pollination
syndromes, floral development, scent emission, seed survival
strategies and the like.
As a system to work with, Petunia combines advantages from
several other model species: it is easy to grow, sets abundant
seeds, while self- and cross pollination is easy; its lifecycle is
four months from seed to seed; plants can be grown very densely, in
1 cm2 plugs and can be rescued easily upon flowering, which makes
even huge selection plots easy to handle. Its flowers (and indeed
leaves) are relatively large and thus obtaining biochemical samples
is no problem. Moreover, transformation and regeneration from leaf
disc or protoplast are long established and easy-to-perform
procedures. On top of this easiness in culture, Petunia harbors an
endogenous, very active transposable element system, which is being
used to great advantage in both forward and reverse genetics
screens.
The virtues of Petunia as a model system have only partly been
highlighted. In a first monograph, edited by K. Sink and published
in 1984, the emphasis was mainly on taxonomy, morphology, classical
and biochemical genetics, cytogenetics, physiology and a number of
topical subjects. At that time, little molecular data was
available. Taking into account that that first monograph will be
offered electronically as a supplement in this upcoming edition, we
would like to put the overall emphasis for the second edition on
molecular developments and on comparative issues.
To this end we propose the underneath set up, where chapters
will be brief and topical. Each chapter will present the historical
setting of its subject, the comparison with other systems (if
available) and the unique progress as made in Petunia. We expect
that the second edition of the Petunia monograph will draw a broad
readership both in academia and industry and hope that it will
contribute to a further expansion in research on this wonderful
Solanaceae."
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