Abstract
The requirement for vernalization, a need for prolonged cold to trigger flowering, aligns reproductive development with favorable spring conditions. In Arabidopsis thaliana vernalization depends on the cold-induced epigenetic silencing of the floral repressor locus FLC. Extensive natural variation in vernalization response is associated with A. thaliana accessions collected from different geographical regions. Here, we analyse natural variation for vernalization temperature requirement in accessions, including those from the northern limit of the A. thaliana range. Vernalization required temperatures above 0°C and was still relatively effective at 14°C in all the accessions. The different accessions had characteristic vernalization temperature profiles. One Northern Swedish accession showed maximum vernalization at 8°C, both at the level of flowering time and FLC chromatin silencing. Historical temperature records predicted all accessions would vernalize in autumn in N. Sweden, a prediction we validated in field transplantation experiments. The vernalization response of the different accessions was monitored over three intervals in the field and found to match that when the average field temperature was given as a constant condition. The vernalization temperature range of 0-14°C meant all accessions fully vernalized before snowfall in N. Sweden. These findings have important implications for understanding the molecular basis of adaptation and for predicting the consequences of climate change on flowering time.
Highlights
The sessile nature of plants necessitates that they modulate most aspects of their growth and development in response to external conditions. One aspect of this is the alignment of developmental transitions with seasonal cues
Cold exposure promotes a cell-autonomous epigenetic switch at FLC in an increasing proportion of cells (Angel et al, 2011, 2015). This epigenetic switching mechanism requires a Polycomb complex associated with PHD proteins (De Lucia et al, 2008), including the cold-induced VIN3 (Sung and Amasino, 2004)
In order to investigate natural variation for vernalization temperature requirement in A. thaliana accessions we selected several genotypes that represent most of the major FLC haplotypes (Li et al, 2014): Lov-1
Summary
The sessile nature of plants necessitates that they modulate most aspects of their growth and development in response to external conditions. All genotypes were vernalized for varying periods at different constant temperatures between 0 ̊C and 14 ̊C and the efficiency of vernalization assayed by Ecology | Plant biology determining flowering time (Figure 1A-E).
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