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SHORT VEGETATIVE PHASE up-regulates TEMPRANILLO2 floral repressor at low ambient temperatures

Authors :
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Commission
Generalitat de Catalunya
National Research Foundation of Korea
Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (South Korea)
Government of South Korea
Ministry of Education (South Korea)
Marín‐González, Esther
Matías‐Hernández, Luis
Aguilar‐Jaramillo, Andrea E.
Lee, Jeong Hwan
Ahn, Ji Hoon
Suárez-López, Paula
Pelaz, Soraya
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Commission
Generalitat de Catalunya
National Research Foundation of Korea
Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (South Korea)
Government of South Korea
Ministry of Education (South Korea)
Marín‐González, Esther
Matías‐Hernández, Luis
Aguilar‐Jaramillo, Andrea E.
Lee, Jeong Hwan
Ahn, Ji Hoon
Suárez-López, Paula
Pelaz, Soraya
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Plants integrate day length and ambient temperature to determine the optimal timing for developmental transitions. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the floral integrator FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) and its closest homolog TWIN SISTER OF FT promote flowering in response to their activator CONSTANS under long-day inductive conditions. Low ambient temperature (16°C) delays flowering, even under inductive photoperiods, through repression of FT, revealing the importance of floral repressors acting at low temperatures. Previously, we have reported that the floral repressors TEMPRANILLO (TEM; TEM1 and TEM2) control flowering time through direct regulation of FT at 22°C. Here, we show that tem mutants are less sensitive than the wild type to changes in ambient growth temperature, indicating that TEM genes may play a role in floral repression at 16°C. Moreover, we have found that TEM2 directly represses the expression of FT and TWIN SISTER OF FT at 16°C. In addition, the floral repressor SHORT VEGETATIVE PHASE (SVP) directly regulates TEM2 but not TEM1 expression at 16°C. Flowering time analyses of svp tem mutants indicate that TEM may act in the same genetic pathway as SVP to repress flowering at 22°C but that SVP and TEM are partially independent at 16°C. Thus, TEM2 partially mediates the temperature-dependent function of SVP at low temperatures. Taken together, our results indicate that TEM genes are also able to repress flowering at low ambient temperatures under inductive long-day conditions.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286581814
Document Type :
Electronic Resource