Telo boxes within the AGAMOUS second intron recruit histone 3 lysine 27 methylation to increase petal number in rose (Rosa chinensis) in response to low temperatures

SUMMARY The petals of rose (Rosa sp.) flowers determine the ornamental and industrial worth of this species. The number of petals in roses was previously shown to be subject to fluctuations in ambient temperature. However, the mechanisms by which rose detects and responds to temperature changes are...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology 2024-06, Vol.118 (5), p.1486-1499
Hauptverfasser: Lu, Jun, Wang, Weinan, Fan, Chunguo, Sun, Jingjing, Yuan, Guozhen, Guo, Yuhan, Yu, Xinyu, Chang, Yufei, Liu, Jinyi, Wang, Changquan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SUMMARY The petals of rose (Rosa sp.) flowers determine the ornamental and industrial worth of this species. The number of petals in roses was previously shown to be subject to fluctuations in ambient temperature. However, the mechanisms by which rose detects and responds to temperature changes are not entirely understood. In this study, we identified short interstitial telomere motifs (telo boxes) in the second intron of AGAMOUS (RcAG) from China rose (Rosa chinensis) that play an essential role in precise temperature perception. The second intron of RcAG harbors two telo boxes that recruit telomere repeat binding factors (RcTRBs), which interact with CURLY LEAF (RcCLF) to compose a repressor complex. We show that this complex suppresses RcAG expression when plants are subjected to low temperatures via depositing H3K27me3 marks (trimethylation of lysine 27 on histone H3) over the RcAG gene body. This regulatory mechanism explains the low‐temperature‐dependent decrease in RcAG transcript levels, leading to the production of more petals under these conditions. Our results underscore an interesting intron‐mediated regulatory mechanism governing RcAG expression, enabling rose plants to perceive temperature cues and establish petal numbers. Significance Statement Our research underscores a new intron‐mediated regulatory mechanism governing RcAG expression, enabling rose plants to perceive temperature cues and establish petal numbers. It might be of great interest to a broad range of readers including environmental response, epigenetic modification, floral organ development, and other researchers in related fields.
ISSN:0960-7412
1365-313X
DOI:10.1111/tpj.16691