Publication | Open Access
The <i>FLF</i> MADS Box Gene: A Repressor of Flowering in Arabidopsis Regulated by Vernalization and Methylation
962
Citations
53
References
1999
Year
Plant GeneticsBotanyGeneticsMolecular GeneticsGenomicsPlant GenomicsPlant Molecular BiologyFlf GeneArabidopsis RegulatedFlf MrnaMads Box GeneGenetic VariationGene ExpressionPlant HormoneBiologyDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMedicinePlant Physiology
A MADS box gene, FLF (for FLOWERING LOCUS F ), isolated from a late-flowering, T-DNA-tagged Arabidopsis mutant, is a semidominant gene encoding a repressor of flowering. The FLF gene appears to integrate the vernalization-dependent and autonomous flowering pathways because its expression is regulated by genes in both pathways. The level of FLF mRNA is downregulated by vernalization and by a decrease in genomic DNA methylation, which is consistent with our previous suggestion that vernalization acts to induce flowering through changes in gene activity that are mediated through a reduction in DNA methylation. The flf-1 mutant requires a greater than normal amount of an exogenous gibberellin (GA3) to decrease flowering time compared with the wild type or with vernalization-responsive late-flowering mutants, suggesting that the FLF gene product may block the promotion of flowering by GAs. FLF maps to a region on chromosome 5 near the FLOWERING LOCUS C gene, which is a semidominant repressor of flowering in late-flowering ecotypes of Arabidopsis.
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