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1.
The phytochrome photoreceptors play important roles in the photoperiodic control of vegetative bud set, growth cessation, dormancy induction, and cold-hardiness in trees. Interestingly, ecotypic differences in photoperiodic responses are observed in many temperate- zone tree species. Northern and southern ecotypes of black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa Torr. & Gray), for example, exhibit marked differences in the timing of short-day-induced bud set and growth cessation, and these responses are controlled by phytochrome. Therefore, as a first step toward determining the molecular genetic basis of photoperiodic ecotypes in trees, we characterized the phytochrome gene (PHY) family in black cottonwood. We recovered fragments of one PHYA and two PHYB using PCR-based cloning and by screening a genomic library. Results from Southern analyses confirmed that black cottonwood has one PHYA locus and two PHYB loci, which we arbitrarily designated PHYB1 and PHYB2. Phylogenetic analyses which included PHY from black cottonwood, Arabidopsis thaliana and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) suggest that the PHYB/D duplications in these species occurred independently. When Southern blots were probed with PHYC, PHYE, and PHYE heterologous probes, the strongest bands that we detected were those of black cottonwood PHYA and/or PHYB. These results suggest that black cottonwood lacks members of the PHYC/F and PHYE subfamilies. Although black cottonwood could contain additional PHY that are distantly related to known angiosperm PHY, our results imply that the PHY family of black cottonwood is less complex than that of other well-characterized dicot species such as Arabidopsis and tomato. Based on Southern analyses of five black cottonwood genotypes representing three photoperiodic ecotypes, substantial polymorphism was detected for at least one of the PHYB loci but not for the PHYA locus. The novel character of the PHY family in black cottonwood, as well as the differences in polymorphism we observed between the PHYA and PHYB subfamilies, indicates that a number of fundamental macro- and microevolutionary questions remain to be answered about the PHY family in dicots.   相似文献   

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3.
The ratio of red to far-red light (R : FR) experienced by seeds during maturation affects germination, but the genetic regulation of this effect is poorly understood. In Arabidopsis thaliana , responses to R : FR are governed by five phytochrome photoreceptors, PHYA–PHYE . PHYA , PHYB and PHYE mediate germination, but their roles in germination response to the seed maturation environment are largely unknown. Seeds of A. thaliana phytochrome mutants and natural accessions were matured in a factorial combination of cold (16 °C) and warm (24 °C) temperatures and high (R : FR = 1) and low (R : FR = 0.6) R : FR environments, resembling sunlight and foliar shade, respectively. Germination was observed in resulting seeds. All five phytochromes mediated germination responses to seed maturation temperature and/or R : FR environment. PHYA suppressed germination in seeds matured under cold temperature, and PHYB promoted germination under the same conditions. PHYD and PHYE promoted germination of seeds matured under warm temperature, but this effect diminished when seeds matured under reduced R : FR. The A. thaliana natural accessions exhibited interesting variation in germination responses to the experimental conditions. Our results suggest that the role of individual PHY loci in regulating plant responses to R : FR varies depending on temperature and provide novel insights into the genetic basis of maternal effects.  相似文献   

4.
To investigate the role of distinct phytochrome pools in photoperiodic timekeeping, we characterized four phytochrome genes in the short-day plant Pharbitis nil. Each PHY gene had different photosensory properties and sensitivity to night break that inhibits flowering. During extended dark periods, PHYE, PHYB, and PHYC mRNA accumulation exhibited a circadian rhythmicity indicative of control by an endogenous clock. Phylogenetic analysis recovered four clades of angiosperm phytochrome genes, phyA, phyB, phyC, and phyE. All except the phyE clade included sequences from both monocots and eudicots. In addition, phyA is sister to phyC and phyE sister to phyB, with gymnosperm sequences sister to either the phyA-phyC clade or to the phyB-phyE clade. These results suggest that a single duplication occurred in an ancestral seed plant before the divergence of extant gymnosperms from angiosperms and that two subsequent duplications occurred in an ancestral angiosperm before the divergence of monocots from eudicots. Thus in P. nil, a multigene family with different patterns of mRNA abundance in light and darkness contributes to the total phytochrome pool: one pool is light labile (phyA), whereas the other is light stable (phyB and phyE). In addition, PHYC mRNA represents a third phytochrome pool with intermediate photosensory properties.  相似文献   

5.
Su YS  Lagarias JC 《The Plant cell》2007,19(7):2124-2139
The photoreversibility of plant phytochromes enables continuous surveillance of the ambient light environment. Through expression of profluorescent, photoinsensitive Tyr-to-His mutant alleles of Arabidopsis thaliana phytochrome B (PHYB(Y276H)) and Arabidopsis phytochrome A (PHYA(Y242H)) in transgenic Arabidopsis plants, we demonstrate that photoconversion is not a prerequisite for phytochrome signaling. PHYB(Y276H)-expressing plants exhibit chromophore-dependent constitutive photomorphogenesis, light-independent phyB(Y276H) nuclear localization, constitutive activation of genes normally repressed in darkness, and light-insensitive seed germination. Fluence rate analyses of transgenic plants expressing PHYB(Y276H), PHYA(Y242H), and other Y(GAF) mutant alleles of PHYB demonstrate that a range of altered light-signaling activities are associated with mutation of this residue. We conclude that the universally conserved GAF domain Tyr residue, with which the bilin chromophore is intimately associated, performs a critical role in coupling light perception to signal transduction by plant phytochromes.  相似文献   

6.
Recently, a novel kinesin-like protein (KCBP) that is regulated by Ca2+/calmodulin was isolated from dicot plants. A homolog of KCBP has not been reported in monocots. To determine if this motor protein is present in phylogenetically divergent flowering plants, Arabidopsis KCBP cDNA was used as a probe to screen a genomic library of maize, an evolutionarily divergent species. This screening resulted in isolation of a KCBP homolog. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequence of the KCBP from maize (ZmKCBP), a monocot, with the previously reported KCBP sequences from dicot species showed that the amino acid sequence, domain organization, and gene structure are highly conserved between monocots and dicots. The C-terminal region of ZmKCBP, containing the motor domain and the calmodulin-binding domain, and the N-terminal tail, with a myosin tail homology region (MyTH4) and talin-like region, showed strong sequence similarity to the KCBP homolog from dicots. However, the coiled-coil region is less conserved between monocots and dicots. The ZmKCBP gene contained 22 exons and 21 introns. The location of 19 of the 21 introns of ZmKCBP is also conserved. The ZmKCBP protein is encoded by a single gene and expressed in all tissues. Affinity-purified antibody to the calmodulin-binding domain of Arabidopsis KCBP detected a protein in both the soluble and the microsomal fractions. The C-terminal region of ZmKCBP, containing the motor and calmodulin-binding domains, bound calmodulin in the presence of calcium and failed to bind in the presence of EGTA. The ZmKCBP, along with other KCBPs from dicots, was grouped into a distinct group in the C-terminal subfamily of kinesin-like proteins. These data suggest that the KCBP is ubiquitous and highly conserved in all flowering plants and the origin of KCBP predated the divergence of monocots and dicots.  相似文献   

7.
FCA and FY are flowering time related genes involved in the autonomous flowering pathwayin Arabidopsis.FCA interacts with FY to regulate the alternative processing of FCA pre-mRNA.The FCA/FY interaction is also required for the regulation of FLC expression,a major floral repressor in Arabidopsis.However,it is not clear if the regulation of this autonomous flowering pathway is also present in monocotplants,such as rice.Recently,alternative RNA processing of OsFCA was observed in rice,which stronglysuggested the existence of an autonomous flowering pathway in rice.In this work,we cloned the cDNA ofthe autonomous flowering pathway gene OsFY from rice.The predicted OsFY protein contained a conserved7 WD-repeat region and at least two Pro-Pro-Leu-Pro motifs compared to Arabidopsis FY.The protein-protein interaction between OsFY and OsFCA-γ,the key feature of their gene function,was also demon-strated using the yeast two-hybrid system.The GenBank database search provided evidence of expressionfor other autonomous pathway gene homologs in rice.These results indicate that the autonomous floweringpathway is present in monocots,and the regulation through FY and FCA interaction is conserved betweenmonocots and dicots.  相似文献   

8.
A reexamination of the genome of the tomato (renamed Solanum lycopersicum L.) indicates that it contains five, or at most perhaps six, phytochrome genes (PHY), each encoding a different apoprotein (PHY). Five previously identified tomato PHY genes have been designated PHYA, PHYB1, PHYB2, PHYE, and PHYF. A molecular phylogenetic analysis is consistent with the hypothesis that the angiosperm PHY family is composed of four subfamilies (A, B, C/F, and E). Southern analyses indicate that the tomato genome does not contain both a PHYC and a PHYF. Molecular phylogenetic analyses presented here, which utilize for the first time full-length PHY sequences from two completely characterized angiosperm gene families, indicate that tomato PHYF is probably an ortholog of Arabidopsis PHYC. They also confirm that the angiosperm PHY family is undergoing relatively rapid differential evolution. Assuming PHYF is an ortholog of PHYC, PHY genes in eudicots are evolving (Ka/site) at 1.52-2.79 times the rate calculated as average for other plant nuclear genes. Again assuming PHYF is an ortholog of PHYC, the rate of evolution of the C and E subfamilies is at least 1.33 times the rate of the A and B subfamilies. PHYA and PHYB in eudicots are evolving at least 1.45 times as fast as their counterparts in the Poaceae. PHY functional domains also exhibit different evolutionary rates. The C-terminal region of angiosperm PHY (codons 800-1105) is evolving at least 2.11 times as fast as the photosensory domain (codons 200-500). The central region of a domain essential for phytochrome signal transduction (codons 652-712) is also evolving rapidly. Nonsynonymous substitutions occur in this region at 2.03-3.75 times the average rate for plant nuclear genes. It is not known if this rapid evolution results from selective pressure or from the absence of evolutionary constraint.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Phytochrome, a red/far-red-light photoreceptor protein of plants, is encoded by a small gene family. Phytochrome A (PHYA), the product of the PHYA gene, is the predominant molecular species of phytochrome in etiolated tissue and has been best characterized biochemically. To define a role for PHYA, we isolated new mutants, designated fre1 (far-red elongated), in Arabidopsis thaliana that were specifically deficient in PHYA spectral activity and protein accumulation. These mutants were identified on the basis of their long hypocotyl phenotype under continuous far-red light. Although the fre1 mutants lacked the hypocotyl response to continuous far-red light, their responses to continuous white light and to end-of-day far-red-light treatments were normal. Thus, PHYA appears to play only a minor role in the regulation of hypocotyl elongation under natural conditions. In contrast, the fre1 mutation affected greening a fre1 mutant was less able than the wild type to deetiolate after growth in the dark. However, the potentiation effect of a red-light pulse on accumulation of chlorophyll was not changed significantly in the fre1 mutants. Thus, the function of PHYA might be highly specialized and restricted to certain phases of Arabidopsis development.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of tropisms is important in determining the final growth form of the plant body. In roots, gravitropism is the predominant tropistic response, but phototropism also plays a role in the oriented growth of roots in flowering plants. In blue or white light, roots exhibit negative phototropism that is mediated by the phototropin family of photoreceptors. In contrast, red light induces a positive phototropism in Arabidopsis roots. Because this red-light-induced response is weak relative to both gravitropism and negative phototropism, we used a novel device to study phototropism without the complications of a counteracting gravitational stimulus. This device is based on a computer-controlled system using real-time image analysis of root growth and a feedback-regulated rotatable stage. Our data show that this system is useful to study root phototropism in response to red light, because in wild-type roots, the maximal curvature detected with this apparatus is 30 degrees to 40 degrees, compared with 5 degrees to 10 degrees without the feedback system. In positive root phototropism, sensing of red light occurs in the root itself and is not dependent on shoot-derived signals resulting from light perception. Phytochrome (Phy)A and phyB were severely impaired in red-light-induced phototropism, whereas the phyD and phyE mutants were normal in this response. Thus, PHYA and PHYB play a key role in mediating red-light-dependent positive phototropism in roots. Although phytochrome has been shown to mediate phototropism in some lower plant groups, this is one of the few reports indicating a phytochrome-dependent phototropism in flowering plants.  相似文献   

12.
Dichotomy in the NRT gene families of dicots and grass species   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A large proportion of the nitrate (NO(3)(-)) acquired by plants from soil is actively transported via members of the NRT families of NO(3)(-) transporters. In Arabidopsis, the NRT1 family has eight functionally characterised members and predominantly comprises low-affinity transporters; the NRT2 family contains seven members which appear to be high-affinity transporters; and there are two NRT3 (NAR2) family members which are known to participate in high-affinity transport. A modified reciprocal best hit (RBH) approach was used to identify putative orthologues of the Arabidopsis NRT genes in the four fully sequenced grass genomes (maize, rice, sorghum, Brachypodium). We also included the poplar genome in our analysis to establish whether differences between Arabidopsis and the grasses may be generally applicable to monocots and dicots. Our analysis reveals fundamental differences between Arabidopsis and the grass species in the gene number and family structure of all three families of NRT transporters. All grass species possessed additional NRT1.1 orthologues and appear to lack NRT1.6/NRT1.7 orthologues. There is significant separation in the NRT2 phylogenetic tree between NRT2 genes from dicots and grass species. This indicates that determination of function of NRT2 genes in grass species will not be possible in cereals based simply on sequence homology to functionally characterised Arabidopsis NRT2 genes and that proper functional analysis will be required. Arabidopsis has a unique NRT3.2 gene which may be a fusion of the NRT3.1 and NRT3.2 genes present in all other species examined here. This work provides a framework for future analysis of NO(3)(-) transporters and NO(3)(-) transport in grass crop species.  相似文献   

13.
Plant responses to red and far-red light are mediated by a family of photoreceptors called phytochromes. In Arabidopsis thaliana, there are genes encoding at least five phytochromes, and it is of interest to learn if the different phytochromes have overlapping or distinct functions. To address this question for two of the phytochromes in Arabidopsis, we have compared light responses of the wild type with those of a phyA null mutant, a phyB null mutant, and a phyA phyB double mutant. We have found that both phyA and phyB mutants have a deficiency in germination, the phyA mutant in far-red light and the phyB mutant in the dark. Furthermore, the germination defect caused by the phyA mutation in far- red light could be suppressed by a phyB mutation, suggesting that phytochrome B (PHYB) can have an inhibitory as well as a stimulatory effect on germination. In red light, the phyA phyB double mutant, but neither single mutant, had poorly developed cotyledons, as well as reduced red-light induction of CAB gene expression and potentiation of chlorophyll induction. The phyA mutant was deficient in sensing a flowering response inductive photoperiod, suggesting that PHYA participates in sensing daylength. In contrast, the phyB mutant flowered earlier than the wild type (and the phyA mutant) under all photoperiods tested, but responded to an inductive photoperiod. Thus, PHYA and PHYB appear to have complementary functions in controlling germination, seedling development, and flowering. We discuss the implications of these results for possible mechanisms of PHYA and PHYB signal transduction.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon whereby genetically identical alleles are differentially expressed dependent on their parent-of-origin. Genomic imprinting has independently evolved in flowering plants and mammals. In both organism classes, imprinting occurs in embryo-nourishing tissues, the placenta and the endosperm, respectively, and it has been proposed that imprinted genes regulate the transfer of nutrients to the developing progeny. Many imprinted genes are located in the vicinity of DNA-methylated transposon or repeat sequences, implying that transposon insertions are associated with the evolution of imprinted loci. The antagonistic action of DNA methylation and Polycomb group-mediated histone methylation seems important for the regulation of many imprinted plant genes, whereby the position of such epigenetic modifications can determine whether a gene will be mainly expressed from either the maternally or paternally inherited alleles. Furthermore, long non-coding RNAs seem to play an as yet underappreciated role for the regulation of imprinted plant genes. Imprinted expression of a number of genes is conserved between monocots and dicots, suggesting that long-term selection can maintain imprinted expression at some loci.  相似文献   

16.
The expression of the Arabidopsis ATHB-2 gene is light-regulated both in seedlings and in adult plants. The gene is expressed at high levels in rapidly elongating etiolated seedlings and is down-regulated by a pulse of red light (R) through the action of a phytochrome other than phytochrome A or B, or by a pulse of far-red light (FR) through the action of phytochrome A. In green plants, the expression of the ATHB-2 gene is rapidly and strongly enhanced by lowering the R:FR ratio perceived by a phytochrome other than A or B. Returning the plant to a high R:FR ratio results in an equally rapid decrease of the ATHB-2 mRNA. Consistently, plants overproducing ATHB-2 show developmental phenotypes characteristic of plants grown in low R:FR: elongated petioles, reduced leaf area, early flowering, and reduced number of rosette leaves. Taken together, the data strongly suggest a direct involvement of ATHB-2 in light-regulated growth phenomena throughout Arabidopsis development.  相似文献   

17.
The flowering plants (Magnoliophyta) are separated into two large classes distinguished by the morphology of their embryos. The embryos of monocots (class Liliopsida) have a single terminal cotyledon, while the embryos of dicots (class Magnoliopsida) usually have two lateral cotyledons. The cotyledons of monocots and dicots also differ in form, and there are no true intermediates. In addition, the third leaf of Nymphaealean seedlings appears to be identical to the single cotyledon of monocots. From this it is concluded that the cotyledons of monocots and dicots are not homologous. In addition, dissimilarity of cotyledons and succeeding leaves in dicots, together with recent genetic studies, suggests that the two cotyledons of dicots are not homologous with the succeeding leaves of the same plant. This interpretation is consistent with the view that the Nymphaealean embryo’s third leaf is homologous to the first leaf (cotyledon) of monocots. Because dicotyledonous embryos are common among seed plants and are present in the Gnetopsids, the most likely scenario is that the dicots share a widespread seed plant symplesiomorphy and that the monocots have lost this character state. A less parsimonious hypothesis of monocotyledonous embryos as plesiomorphic for angiosperms is also discussed. Genetic analysis of early embryo development in a variety of vascular plants may be the only way to conclusively determine the evolutionary origin of the distinctive difference between monocot and dicot embryos.  相似文献   

18.
19.
J W Reed  P Nagpal  D S Poole  M Furuya    J Chory 《The Plant cell》1993,5(2):147-157
Phytochromes are a family of plant photoreceptors that mediate physiological and developmental responses to changes in red and far-red light conditions. In Arabidopsis, there are genes for at least five phytochrome proteins. These photoreceptors control such responses as germination, stem elongation, flowering, gene expression, and chloroplast and leaf development. However, it is not known which red light responses are controlled by which phytochrome species, or whether the different phytochromes have overlapping functions. We report here that previously described hy3 mutants have mutations in the gene coding for phytochrome B (PhyB). These are the first mutations shown to lie in a plant photoreceptor gene. A number of tissues are abnormally elongated in the hy3(phyB) mutants, including hypocotyls, stems, petioles, and root hairs. In addition, the mutants flower earlier than the wild type, and they accumulate less chlorophyll. PhyB thus controls Arabidopsis development at numerous stages and in multiple tissues.  相似文献   

20.
Shoot elongation in woody plants is modulated by a multitude of light signals, including irradiance, photoperiod and spectral composition, for which the phytochrome system is the probable photoreceptor. In hybrid aspen ( Populus tremula  ×  tremuloides ) overexpression of the oat phytochrome A ( PHYA ) prevents growth cessation in response to short photoperiod, and plants exhibit dwarf growth that is related to reduced cell numbers and reduced gibberellin contents. End-of-day far-red treatment significantly enhances internode elongation in PHYA overexpressors as well as in the wild type, and this was found here to be caused by stimulation of cell division and cell extension. In PHYA overexpressors the effects were substantially larger than in the wild type, and resulted in complete restoration of wild type-like plant length as well as cell numbers, and gibberellin content was greatly increased. No clear effect of far-red end-of-day treatment on gibberellin levels could be detected in the wild type. It thus appears that the far-red end-of-day treatment might modify the responsiveness of the tissue to GA rather than the GA levels. The observed effects were completely reversed by a subsequent irradiation with red light. The present data show that dwarfism due to PHYA overexpression can be completely overcome by far red end-of-day treatment, and the observations indicate that effects of far red end-of-day treatments appear to be mediated by phytochrome(s) other than phytochrome A.  相似文献   

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