An explanatory model of temperature influence on flowering through whole-plant accumulation of FLOWERING LOCUS T in Arabidopsis thaliana

Author:

Kinmonth-Schultz Hannah A1,MacEwen Melissa J S1,Seaton Daniel D2,Millar Andrew J2ORCID,Imaizumi Takato1ORCID,Kim Soo-Hyung3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

2. SynthSys and School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

3. School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Abstract We assessed mechanistic temperature influence on flowering by incorporating temperature-responsive flowering mechanisms across developmental age into an existing model. Temperature influences the leaf production rate as well as expression of FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT), a photoperiodic flowering regulator that is expressed in leaves. The Arabidopsis Framework Model incorporated temperature influence on leaf growth but ignored the consequences of leaf growth on and direct temperature influence of FT expression. We measured FT production in differently aged leaves and modified the model, adding mechanistic temperature influence on FT transcription, and causing whole-plant FT to accumulate with leaf growth. Our simulations suggest that in long days, the developmental stage (leaf number) at which the reproductive transition occurs is influenced by day length and temperature through FT, while temperature influences the rate of leaf production and the time (in days) the transition occurs. Further, we demonstrate that FT is mainly produced in the first 10 leaves in the Columbia (Col-0) accession, and that FT accumulation alone cannot explain flowering in conditions in which flowering is delayed. Our simulations supported our hypotheses that: (i) temperature regulation of FT, accumulated with leaf growth, is a component of thermal time, and (ii) incorporating mechanistic temperature regulation of FT can improve model predictions when temperatures change over time.

Funder

Cooperative Research Program for Agricultural Science and Technology Development

Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea

Specific Cooperative Agreement

National Institute of Health

Next-Generation BioGreen 21 Program

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council awards

University of Washington Biology Department Frye-Hotson-Rigg Fellowship

National Institute of Health Institutional Research and Academic Career Development Award

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Modeling and Simulation

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