Abstract

Three genetic pathways promote flowering of Arabidopsis under long photoperiods. These pathways are represented by the genes CO, FCA, and GA1, which act in the long-day, autonomous, and gibberellin pathways, respectively. To test whether these are the only pathways that promote flowering under long photoperiods, the co-2 fca-1 ga1-3 triple mutant was constructed. These plants never flowered under long- or short-day conditions, indicating that the three pathways impaired by these mutations are absolutely required for flowering under these conditions. The triple mutant background represents a "vegetative ground state" enabling the roles of single pathways to be described in the corresponding double mutants. The phenotypes of plants carrying all eight combinations of wild-type and mutant alleles at the three loci were compared under long- and short-day conditions. This analysis demonstrated that under long photoperiods the long-day pathway promoted flowering most effectively, whereas under short photoperiods the gibberellin pathway had the strongest effect. The autonomous pathway had a weak effect when acting alone under either photoperiod but appeared to play an important role in facilitating the promotion of flowering by the other two pathways. The vegetative phenotype of the triple mutant could be overcome by vernalization, suggesting that a fourth pathway promoted flowering under these conditions. These observations are discussed in light of current models describing the regulation of flowering time in Arabidopsis.

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