Move on up, it's time for change--mobile signals controlling photoperiod-dependent flowering

Plants do not bloom randomly--but how do they know when and where to make flowers? Here, we review molecular mechanisms that integrate spatial and temporal information in day-length-dependent flowering. Primarily through genetic analyses in two species, Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, we today unders...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genes & development 2007-10, Vol.21 (19), p.2371-2384
Hauptverfasser: Kobayashi, Yasushi, Weigel, Detlef
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creator Kobayashi, Yasushi
Weigel, Detlef
description Plants do not bloom randomly--but how do they know when and where to make flowers? Here, we review molecular mechanisms that integrate spatial and temporal information in day-length-dependent flowering. Primarily through genetic analyses in two species, Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, we today understand the essentials of two central issues in plant biology: how the appropriate photoperiod generates an inductive stimulus based on an external coincidence mechanism, and the nature of the mobile flowering signal, florigen, which relays photoperiod-dependent information from the leaf to the growing tip of the plant, the shoot apex.
doi_str_mv 10.1101/gad.1589007
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subjects Arabidopsis - genetics
Arabidopsis - growth & development
Arabidopsis Proteins - genetics
Arabidopsis Proteins - metabolism
Arabidopsis thaliana
Flowers - genetics
Flowers - growth & development
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
Oryza sativa
Photoperiod
title Move on up, it's time for change--mobile signals controlling photoperiod-dependent flowering
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