Plants monitor and integrate temperature, photoperiod and light quality signals to respond to continuous changes in their environment. The GIGANTEA (GI) protein is central in diverse signaling pathways, including photoperiodic, sugar and light signaling pathways, stress responses and circadian clock regulation. Previously, GI was shown to activate expression of the key floral regulators CONSTANS (CO) and FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) by facilitating degradation of a family of CYCLING DOF FACTOR (CDF) transcriptional repressors. However, whether CDFs are implicated in other processes affected by GI remains unclear. We investigated the contribution of the GI-CDF module to traits that depend on GI. Transcriptome profiling indicated that mutations in GI and the CDF genes have antagonistic effects on expression of a wider set of genes than CO and FT, whilst other genes are regulated by GI independently of the CDFs. Detailed expression studies followed by phenotypic assays showed that the CDFs function downstream of GI, influencing responses to freezing temperatures and growth, but are not necessary for proper clock function. Thus GI-mediated regulation of CDFs contributes to several processes in addition to flowering, but is not implicated in all of the traits influenced by GI. Significance StatementGIGANTEA (GI) plays crucial roles in several developmental and physiological processes but how CYCLING DOF FACTOR (CDFs) proteins are involved in such processes has not been determined yet. A genome-wide transcript profiling approach identified pathways influenced by GI and the CDFs, suggesting that tolerance to freezing temperatures and growth are both affected by the GI-CDF module.

The GI-CDF module of Arabidopsis affects freezing tolerance and growth as well as flowering / F. Fornara, A. De Montaigu, A. Sánchez Villarreal, Y. Takahashi, E. Ver Loren Van Themaat, B. Huettel, S.J. Davis, G. Coupland. - In: PLANT JOURNAL. - ISSN 0960-7412. - 81:5(2015 Mar), pp. 695-706. [10.1111/tpj.12759]

The GI-CDF module of Arabidopsis affects freezing tolerance and growth as well as flowering

F. Fornara
Primo
;
2015

Abstract

Plants monitor and integrate temperature, photoperiod and light quality signals to respond to continuous changes in their environment. The GIGANTEA (GI) protein is central in diverse signaling pathways, including photoperiodic, sugar and light signaling pathways, stress responses and circadian clock regulation. Previously, GI was shown to activate expression of the key floral regulators CONSTANS (CO) and FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) by facilitating degradation of a family of CYCLING DOF FACTOR (CDF) transcriptional repressors. However, whether CDFs are implicated in other processes affected by GI remains unclear. We investigated the contribution of the GI-CDF module to traits that depend on GI. Transcriptome profiling indicated that mutations in GI and the CDF genes have antagonistic effects on expression of a wider set of genes than CO and FT, whilst other genes are regulated by GI independently of the CDFs. Detailed expression studies followed by phenotypic assays showed that the CDFs function downstream of GI, influencing responses to freezing temperatures and growth, but are not necessary for proper clock function. Thus GI-mediated regulation of CDFs contributes to several processes in addition to flowering, but is not implicated in all of the traits influenced by GI. Significance StatementGIGANTEA (GI) plays crucial roles in several developmental and physiological processes but how CYCLING DOF FACTOR (CDFs) proteins are involved in such processes has not been determined yet. A genome-wide transcript profiling approach identified pathways influenced by GI and the CDFs, suggesting that tolerance to freezing temperatures and growth are both affected by the GI-CDF module.
Arabidopsis thaliana; circadian clock; CYCLING DOF FACTOR; flowering; freezing tolerance; GIGANTEA; growth
Settore BIO/01 - Botanica Generale
Settore BIO/18 - Genetica
Settore BIO/11 - Biologia Molecolare
mar-2015
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/273755
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