Author:
Bagnall David J.,King Rod W.
Abstract
A number of phytochrome mutants have been examined for involvement in high
irradiance (HIR) or red/far-red (R/FR) end-of-day (EOD) photoresponses
during flowering of the long-day (LD) plant,
Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. A large component of
phytochrome A (phyA) response is shown to involve an indirect effect via
photosynthesis. When grown autotrophically in soil at a low irradiance (80 mol
m–2 s–1), the
phyA-211 mutant flowered extremely late compared with
wild type and its leaf area was halved, both effects being reversed by
increase in photosynthetic irradiance. Supplying sucrose via agar led to very
early flowering with little indication of an additional direct phyA HIR. For
light-stable phytochrome apoprotein mutants (phyB, phyD)
or chromophore mutants (hy1, hy2), flowering was early
and R/FR photoreversible EOD response was erased. Conversely, flowering
was delayed in a transgenic line overexpressing the PHYB apoprotein. The FR
EOD promotion of flowering via phyB was retained in darkness, brief night
interruptions mimicking LD response. This novel finding emphasizes the
importance of phyB-like phytochromes, with phyA acting indirectly. Whether
phyB influences time measurement remains uncertain as we found no rhythmicity
in this response to night interruptions. Overall, the role(s) of phytochromes
in the regulation of flowering of Arabidopsis include
EOD phyB-type response, a minor phyA photoperiodic response, and a large
indirect phyA effect involving photosynthesis.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
22 articles.
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