Aberrant Expression of the Light-Inducible and Circadian-Regulated APRR9 Gene Belonging to the Circadian-Associated APRR1/TOC1 Quintet Results in the Phenotype of Early Flowering in Arabidopsis thaliana
Open Access
- 15 August 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant and Cell Physiology
- Vol. 43 (8) , 833-843
- https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcf118
Abstract
Several Arabidopsis genes have been proposed to encode potential clock-associated components, including the Myb-related CCA1 and LHY transcription factors and a member (APRR1/TOC1) of the family of pseudo-response regulators. We previously showed that transcripts of the APRR1/TOC1 family genes each start accumulating after dawn rhythmically and sequentially at intervals in the order of APRR9→APRR7→APRR5→APRR3→APRR1/TOC1, under the conditions of continuous light. Nevertheless, no evidence has been provided that each member of the APRR1/TOC1 quintet, except for APRR1/TOC1, is indeed relevant to the mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms. Here we attempt to provide such evidence by characterizing transgenic plants that aberrantly (or constitutively) express the APRR9 gene in a manner independent of circadian rhythms. The resulting APRR9-ox plants showed intriguing phenotypes with regard to circadian rhythms, in two aspects. First, the aberrant expression of APRR9 resulted in a characteristic phenotype with regard to transcriptional events, in which short-period rhythms were commonly observed for certain circadian-regulated genes, including CCA1, LHY, APRR1/TOC1, other APRR1/TOC1 members, ELF3, and CAB2. With regard to biological consequences, such APRR9-ox plants flowered much earlier than wild-type plants, in a manner independent of photoperiodicity (or under short-day conditions). These results suggest that APRR9 (and perhaps other members of the APRR1/TOC1 quintet) must also be taken into consideration for a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms, and also underlying control of the flowering time through the photoperiodic long-day pathway.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- LHY and CCA1 Are Partially Redundant Genes Required to Maintain Circadian Rhythms in ArabidopsisDevelopmental Cell, 2002
- Critical Role for CCA1 and LHY in Maintaining Circadian Rhythmicity in ArabidopsisCurrent Biology, 2002
- Flowering in time: genes controlling photoperiodic flowering inArabidopsisPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2001
- Reciprocal Regulation Between TOC1 and LHY / CCA1 Within the Arabidopsis Circadian ClockScience, 2001
- Day-Length Perception and the Photoperiodic Regulation of Flowering in ArabidopsisJournal of Biological Rhythms, 2001
- Cloning of the Arabidopsis Clock Gene TOC1 , an Autoregulatory Response Regulator HomologScience, 2000
- Circadian rhythms in plants: a millennial viewPhysiologia Plantarum, 2000
- How plants tell the timeCurrent Opinion in Plant Biology, 2000
- Control of Circadian Rhythms and Photoperiodic Flowering by the Arabidopsis GIGANTEA GeneScience, 1999
- GIGANTEA: a circadian clock-controlled gene that regulates photoperiodic flowering in Arabidopsis and encodes a protein with several possible membrane-spanning domainsThe EMBO Journal, 1999