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Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue

The role of gibberellins (GAs) during floral induction has been widely studied in the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Less is known about this control in perennials. It is thought that GA is a major regulator of flowering in rose. In spring, low GA content may be necessary for floral initiation....

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Autores principales: Randoux, Marie, Jeauffre, Julien, Thouroude, Tatiana, Vasseur, François, Hamama, Latifa, Juchaux, Marjorie, Sakr, Soulaiman, Foucher, Fabrice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3504503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23175671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ers310
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author Randoux, Marie
Jeauffre, Julien
Thouroude, Tatiana
Vasseur, François
Hamama, Latifa
Juchaux, Marjorie
Sakr, Soulaiman
Foucher, Fabrice
author_facet Randoux, Marie
Jeauffre, Julien
Thouroude, Tatiana
Vasseur, François
Hamama, Latifa
Juchaux, Marjorie
Sakr, Soulaiman
Foucher, Fabrice
author_sort Randoux, Marie
collection PubMed
description The role of gibberellins (GAs) during floral induction has been widely studied in the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Less is known about this control in perennials. It is thought that GA is a major regulator of flowering in rose. In spring, low GA content may be necessary for floral initiation. GA inhibited flowering in once-flowering roses, whereas GA did not block blooming in continuous-flowering roses. Recently, RoKSN, a homologue of TFL1, was shown to control continuous flowering. The loss of RoKSN function led to continuous flowering behaviour. The objective of this study was to understand the molecular control of flowering by GA and the involvement of RoKSN in this inhibition. In once-flowering rose, the exogenous application of GA(3) in spring inhibited floral initiation. Application of GA(3) during a short period of 1 month, corresponding to the floral transition, was sufficient to inhibit flowering. At the molecular level, RoKSN transcripts were accumulated after GA(3) treatment. In spring, this accumulation is correlated with floral inhibition. Other floral genes such as RoFT, RoSOC1, and RoAP1 were repressed in a RoKSN-dependent pathway, whereas RoLFY and RoFD repression was RoKSN independent. The RoKSN promoter contained GA-responsive cis-elements, whose deletion suppressed the response to GA in a heterologous system. In summer, once-flowering roses did not flower even after exogenous application of a GA synthesis inhibitor that failed to repress RoKSN. A model is presented for the GA inhibition of flowering in spring mediated by the induction of RoKSN. In summer, factors other than GA may control RoKSN.
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spelling pubmed-35045032012-11-23 Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue Randoux, Marie Jeauffre, Julien Thouroude, Tatiana Vasseur, François Hamama, Latifa Juchaux, Marjorie Sakr, Soulaiman Foucher, Fabrice J Exp Bot Research Paper The role of gibberellins (GAs) during floral induction has been widely studied in the annual plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Less is known about this control in perennials. It is thought that GA is a major regulator of flowering in rose. In spring, low GA content may be necessary for floral initiation. GA inhibited flowering in once-flowering roses, whereas GA did not block blooming in continuous-flowering roses. Recently, RoKSN, a homologue of TFL1, was shown to control continuous flowering. The loss of RoKSN function led to continuous flowering behaviour. The objective of this study was to understand the molecular control of flowering by GA and the involvement of RoKSN in this inhibition. In once-flowering rose, the exogenous application of GA(3) in spring inhibited floral initiation. Application of GA(3) during a short period of 1 month, corresponding to the floral transition, was sufficient to inhibit flowering. At the molecular level, RoKSN transcripts were accumulated after GA(3) treatment. In spring, this accumulation is correlated with floral inhibition. Other floral genes such as RoFT, RoSOC1, and RoAP1 were repressed in a RoKSN-dependent pathway, whereas RoLFY and RoFD repression was RoKSN independent. The RoKSN promoter contained GA-responsive cis-elements, whose deletion suppressed the response to GA in a heterologous system. In summer, once-flowering roses did not flower even after exogenous application of a GA synthesis inhibitor that failed to repress RoKSN. A model is presented for the GA inhibition of flowering in spring mediated by the induction of RoKSN. In summer, factors other than GA may control RoKSN. Oxford University Press 2012-11 2012-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3504503/ /pubmed/23175671 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ers310 Text en © 2012 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Randoux, Marie
Jeauffre, Julien
Thouroude, Tatiana
Vasseur, François
Hamama, Latifa
Juchaux, Marjorie
Sakr, Soulaiman
Foucher, Fabrice
Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title_full Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title_fullStr Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title_full_unstemmed Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title_short Gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, RoKSN, a rose TFL1 homologue
title_sort gibberellins regulate the transcription of the continuous flowering regulator, roksn, a rose tfl1 homologue
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3504503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23175671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ers310
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