Fan, Zhi-Yi, He, Xin-Hua, Fan, Yan, Yu, Hai-Xia, Wang, Yi-Han, Xie, Xiao-Jie, Liu, Yuan, Mo, Xiao, Wang, Jin-Ying, and Luo, Cong
FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) is a key integrator of environmental signals and internal cues and plays a central role in the photoperiod response mechanism in Arabidopsis. However, the function of FTs in Mangifera indica L. is unknown. In this study, we identified three MiFTs genes from mango and characterized their role in flowering regulation. The open reading frames of MiFT1 , MiFT2 , and MiFT3 are 540, 516, and 588 bp in length and encode 180, 172, and 196 amino acids, respectively; the genes belong to the PEBP family. MiFTs share the conserved exon/intron structure of FTs. The nucleotide sequence of MiFT1 is 90% identical to that of MiFT2 and 82% identical to that of MiFT3 ; MiFT2 and MiFT3 share 81% homology with each other. According to expression analysis, MiFTs were detected at different expression levels in all tested tissues. The expression levels of the three MiFTs were significantly different in leaves during flower development, and MiFT1 expression increased sharply in leaves and was significantly higher than that of the other two MiFTs during flower bud development. All three MiFTs showed daily cycles. Ectopic expression of the three MiFTs in transgenic Arabidopsis resulted in an earlier flowering genotype under long-day conditions, and MiFT1 had the strongest effect in promoting flowering. Additionally, overexpression of three MiFTs in Arabidopsis upregulated the expression levels of several flowering-related genes. Our results suggest that the three MiFTs have positive roles in promoting flowering and suggest that MiFT1 may acts as a key regulator in the flowering pathway. • 1, Three MiFTs genes MiFT1 , MiFT2 , and MiFT3 were cloned from mango. • 2, MiFT1 was highly expressed in adult leaves, MiFT2 in adult stems and MiFT3 in adult leaves and flowers. • 3, Expression profiles of MiFTs were regulated by diurnal rhythm. • 4, Overexpression of three MiFTs in Arabidopsis resulted in early flowering. • 5, MiFT1 may encode a florigen that acts as a key regulator in the mango flowering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]