Abstract

In maize plants (Zea mays L.), the extent of vegetative development in the shoot is precisely regulated such that the apical meristem produces a predictable number of leaves before converting to tassel development. In previous experiments using shoot apex culture, we showed that the developmental program that limits vegetative development in maize is not intrinsic to the shoot apical meristem. Rather, the meristem receives information from elsewhere in the plant and responds by either continuing leaf initiation or becoming determined for determinate growth and forming an inflorescence, the tassel. Here we examine leaf primordia as potential sources for that information using shoot apex culture. Our results show that the presence of the four to six youngest leaf primordia on the shoot apex is sufficient to provide such information. The ability to reset shoot development by meristem culture also allows us to examine the basis for expression of a specific phenotype at a particular developmental stage. We found that the mutation hcf106, which is typically expressed only during seedling stages, is not re‐expressed when the shoot morphogically has regained a juvenile phase.

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