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Phytochrome control of flowering is temperature sensitive and correlates with expression of the floral integratorFT

Authors :
Elin Thingnaes
Garry C. Whitelam
Karen J. Halliday
Michael G. Salter
Source :
The Plant Journal. 33:875-885
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Wiley, 2003.

Abstract

In Arabidopsis flowering is accelerated by reduced red:far-red (R:FR) ratio which signals the presence of neighbouring vegetation. Hastened flowering is one component of the shade-avoidance syndrome of responses, which alter many aspects of development in response to the threat of potential competition. Of the red/far-red-absorbing photoreceptors it is phyB that plays the most prominent role in shade-avoidance, although other related phytochromes act redundantly with phyB. It is well established that the phyB mutant has a constitutively early flowering phenotype. However, we have shown that the early flowering phenotype of phyB is temperature-dependent. We have established that this temperature-sensitive flowering response defines a pathway that appears to be independent of the autonomous-FLC pathway. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that the phytochromes control the expression of the floral promoter FT. We have also shown that other phyB-controlled responses, including petiole elongation, are not sensitive to the same temperature change. This suggests that discrete pathways control flowering and petiole elongation, components of the shade-avoidance response. This work provides an insight into the phytochrome and temperature interactions that maintain flowering control.

Details

ISSN :
09607412
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Plant Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c0f580afb3da15c35c6322be315f98dd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-313x.2003.01674.x