Abstract
The photoperiod sensitivity gene Ppd-1 influences the timing of flowering in temperate cereals such as wheat and barley. The effect of Ppd-1 on the expression of flowering-time genes was assessed by examining the expression levels of the vernalization genes VRN1 and VRN3/WFT and of two CONSTANS-like genes, WCO1 and TaHd1, during vegetative and reproductive growth stages. Two near-isogenic lines (NILs) were used: the first carried a photoperiod-insensitive allele of Ppd-1 (Ppd-1a-NIL), the other, a photoperiod-sensitive allele (Ppd-1b-NIL). We found that the expression pattern of VRN1 was similar in Ppd-1a-NIL and Ppd-1b-NIL plants, suggesting that VRN1 is not regulated by Ppd-1. Under long day conditions, VRN3/WFT showed similar expression patterns in Ppd-1a-NIL and Ppd-1b-NIL plants. However, expression differed greatly under short day conditions: VRN3/WFT expression was detected in Ppd-1a-NIL plants at the 5-leaf stage when they transited from vegetative to reproductive growth; very low expression was present in Ppd-1b-NIL throughout all growth stages. Thus, the Ppd-1b allele acts to down-regulate VRN3/WFT under short day conditions. WCO1 showed high levels of expression at the vegetative stage, which decreased during the phase transition and reproductive growth stages in both Ppd-1a-NIL and Ppd-1b-NIL plants under short day conditions. By contrast to WCO1, TaHd1 was up-regulated during the reproductive stage. The level of TaHd1 expression was much higher in Ppd-1a-NIL than the Ppd-1b-NIL plants, suggesting that the Ppd-1b allele down-regulates TaHd1 under short day conditions. The present study indicates that down-regulation of VRN3/WFT together with TaHd1 is the cause of late flowering in the Ppd-1b-NIL plants under short day conditions.
Highlights
The transition from vegetative to reproductive growth is associated with heading time, one of the most important traits in cereal crops
Difference in heading times between Ppd-1a-nearisogenic lines (NILs) and Ppd-1b-NIL plants We previously reported that the near-isogenic line (NIL) of bread wheat cv
No significant difference in heading time was found between Ppd-1a-NIL and Ppd-1b-NIL; both genotypes showed early heading
Summary
The transition from vegetative to reproductive growth (flowering) is associated with heading time, one of the most important traits in cereal crops. In bread wheat (Triticum aestivum, 2n=6x=42, genome constitution AABBDD), heading time is genetically determined by three characteristic components, i.e., vernalization requirement, photoperiod sensitivity and narrow-sense earliness (earliness per se), which compose the autonomous promoting pathway (Worland and Snape, 2001). Of these characteristics, photoperiod sensitivity is the most important for determining heading time in autumn sown temperate cereals.
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