Abstract

Flowering at the appropriate time is crucial for reproductive success and is strongly influenced by various pathways such as photoperiod, circadian clock, FRIGIDA and vernalization. Although each separate pathway has been extensively studied, much less is known about the interactions between them. In this study we have investigated the relationship between the photoperiod/circadian clock gene and FRIGIDA/FLC by characterizing the function of the B-box STO gene family. STO has two B-box Zn-finger domains but lacks the CCT domain. Its expression is controlled by circadian rhythm and is affected by environmental factors and phytohormones. Loss and gain of function mutants show diversiform phenotypes from seed germination to flowering. The sto-1 mutant flowers later than the wild type (WT) under short day growth conditions, while over-expression of STO causes early flowering both in long and short days. STO over-expression not only reduces FLC expression level but it also activates FT and SOC1 expression. It also does not rely on the other B-box gene CO or change the circadian clock system to activate FT and SOC1. Furthermore, the STO activation of FT and SOC1 expression is independent of the repression of FLC; rather STO and FLC compete with each other to regulate downstream genes. Our results indicate that photoperiod and the circadian clock pathway gene STO can affect the key flowering time genes FLC and FT/SOC1 separately, and reveals a novel perspective to the mechanism of flowering regulation.

Highlights

  • There are several key developmental changes during the plant lifecycle

  • The MADS box gene FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) is a central repressor of flowering in Arabidopsis [4] [5], and its expression is regulated by vernalization and an autonomous pathway involved in chromatin regulation, transcription level and co-transcriptional RNA metabolism [6]

  • In STOOE, the purple color concentrated in the main vascular tissue, while the remaining leaf blade was much greener than wild type (WT)

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Summary

Introduction

There are several key developmental changes during the plant lifecycle. One of these is flowering, the correct timing of which is critical for reproductive success [1]. The MADS box gene FLC is a central repressor of flowering in Arabidopsis [4] [5], and its expression is regulated by vernalization and an autonomous pathway involved in chromatin regulation, transcription level and co-transcriptional RNA metabolism [6]. Vernalization pathway genes (VRN1, VRN2, VIN3, VIL1/VRN5, atPRMT5) repress FLC expression by histone modification of FLC during and after the cold treatment [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]

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