Public Release: May 31, 2007
The Plant Cell
Research Identifies Protein That Signals Flowering in Squash
Plants
Daylength-dependent initiation of flowering involves a leaf-derived signal,
termed florigen, which is transported through plant vascular tissue (phloem)
to where it acts in meristematic cells within the shoot apex. In research published
in The Plant Cell, analysis of the phloem sap collected from daylength-induced
and non-induced squash plants shows that the presence of FT-Like protein, but
not FT-Like mRNA, is highly correlated with the onset of flowering. This research
provides some of the most solid evidence to date that FT protein acts as a florigenic
signal.
Contacts:
William J. Lucas
wjlucas@ucdavis.edu
Section of Plant Biology
College of Biological Sciences
University of California
Davis, CA 95616
Tel: 530-752-1093
Nancy Eckardt
neckardt@aspb.org
American Society of Plant Biologists
Tel: 970-495-9918

Research Identifies Protein That Signals Flowering in Squash
Plants
FLOWERING LOCUS T Protein Acts as a Signal for Flowering in
Cucurbits
The length of the day relative to night, or photoperiod, is a strong determining
factor for the induction of flowering in many plant species. Short day (SD)
plants require a short day length (or more precisely, a long night) in order
to flower. These are plants that flower as the days grow shorter, such as in
the fall in temperate regions. Long day (LD) plants will flower when nights
are short (and days are long), and typically flower in late spring or early
summer. SD crops include rice and maize, and LD crops include wheat, barley,
oats and peas. Day-neutral plants will flower under either long or short days.
In addition to its fundamental importance in basic plant biology, understanding
and manipulating the photoperiodic control of flowering time is an important
objective in crop breeding and development programs, because it can aid in optimizing
crop yields and other traits for local environmental conditions.
Experimental evidence indicates that a flowering-inducing substance, known
as florigen, is produced in the leaves of a plant under inducing conditions,
and then is transported through the phloem to the floral meristems, where it
acts together with other factors to induce flowering. The precise nature of
the florigenic signal has eluded plant biologists for over 70 years, owing to
the difficulties attendant with the accurate detection and measurement of compounds
in phloem sap, and designing experiments to allow accurate monitoring of long-distance
transport of potential signalling compounds in plants. Some of the principal
factors associated with the photoperiodic induction of flowering are proteins
known as CONSTANS (CO) and FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT). CO does not appear to travel
long distances through the phloem, but rather, it strongly influences the production
of another substance (i.e. florigen) that does. Recent work in a number of laboratories
has focused on a role for FT protein and/or FT mRNA as the florigenic signal,
and evidence is building that the FT protein is responsible, at least in tomato,
rice, and the model plant Arabidopsis (which is in the mustard or cabbage
family). In research published this week in The Plant Cell, researchers
Ming-Kuem Lin and William J. Lucas from the University of California, Davis,
together with a number of coauthors, provide strong evidence that FT protein
acts as a florigenic signal in cucurbit plant species (squashes).
The strength of this research lies in the nature of the experimental system
utilized. The authors chose Cucurbita squash species because reliable
methods for the analysis of translocation through the phloem stream have been
developed in this system. However, most cucurbits are day-neutral plants, and
to investigate the nature of the florigenic signal effectively, it was essential
to utilize an obligate SD plant. In day-neutral plants, it is not possible to
manipulate flowering by altering the daylength. By contrast, obligate SD plants
will remain in the vegetative state until and unless inducing conditions (such
as long nights) occur, and therefore they represent the ideal system for experimental
manipulation to investigate this phenomenon. Principal investigator William
J. Lucas explained, "it is important for these experiments to use a plant
that is 100% inducible; in other words it absolutely will not flower unless
it is induced. Then, with carefully designed grafting experiments, we can precisely
control the introduction of putative florigenic signals into the translocation
stream." The authors screened nearly one hundred accessions of Cucurbita
species to identify one, belonging to the undomesticated squash species Cucurbita
moschata, that remained vegetative under LD conditions and flowered only when
grown under SD conditions.
The authors then used the potyvirus Zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV)
as a delivery vector to test whether long-distance movement of FT mRNA
and/or FT protein was required for floral induction. The choice of a potyvirus
vector was important as these plant viruses do not produce sub-genomic RNA species,
whose presence could lead to confounding results. The authors found that C.
moschata plants could be induced to flower under the normally non-inducing
LD conditions following ectopic expression of FT by the ZYMV vector. Analysis
of such induced plants showed that the infection zone of ZYMV was not coincident
with the plant's floral meristems, indicating that FT mRNA is unlikely
to be the florigenic signal in this system. Next, heterografting studies were
conducted using flowering Cucurbita maxima (pumpkin) stocks (the stock
is the portion below the graft union containing the roots) grafted to non-induced,
LD-grown C. moschata scions (the portion above the graft union). These
experiments led to flowering of the C. moschata scions, indicating efficient
transmission of a florigenic signal from the C. maxima stocks through
the phloem into the scions. Analyses performed on phloem sap collected from
these flowering C. maxima stocks failed to detect the presence of FT
mRNA, but revealed the presence of FT protein in the translocation stream.
This research provides some of the most solid evidence to date that FT protein
acts as a florigenic signal.
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation; U.S. Department
of Energys Office of Basic Energy Sciences Energy Biosciences Program;
and New Zealand Foundation for Research, Science and Technology.
###
The research paper cited in this report is available at the
following link:
http://www.aspb.org/pressreleases/TPCM051920.pdf.
Ming-Kuem Lin, Helene Belanger, Young-Jin Lee, Erika Varkonyi-Gasic, Ken-ichiro
Taoka, Eriko Miura, Beatriz Xoconostle-Cazares, Karla Gendler, Richard A. Jorgensen,
Brett Phinney, Tony J. Lough, and William J. Lucas: FLOWERING LOCUS T Protein
May Act as the Long-Distance Florigenic Signal in the Cucurbits.
###
The Plant Cell (http://www.plantcell.org/)
is published by the American Society of Plant Biologists. For more information
about ASPB, please visit http://www.aspb.org/.
Figure credit: William J. Lucas
Restrictions: Use for noncommercial, educational purposes is granted without
written permission. Please include a citation and acknowledge ASPB as copyright
holder. For all other uses, contact diane@aspb.org.
|