Regulation of Flowering Time by<i>Arabidopsis</i>Photoreceptors

Hongwei Guo(University of California, Los Angeles), Hongyun Yang(University of California, Los Angeles), Todd C. Mockler(University of California, Los Angeles), Chentao Lin(University of California, Los Angeles)
Science
February 27, 1998
Cited by 793

Abstract

The shift in plants from vegetative growth to floral development is regulated by red-far-red light receptors (phytochromes) and blue-ultraviolet A light receptors (cryptochromes). A mutation in the Arabidopsis thaliana CRY2 gene encoding a blue-light receptor apoprotein (CRY2) is allelic to the late-flowering mutant, fha. Flowering in cry2/fha mutant plants is only incompletely responsive to photoperiod. Cryptochrome 2 (cry2) is a positive regulator of the flowering-time gene CO, the expression of which is regulated by photoperiod. Analysis of flowering in cry2 and phyB mutants in response to different wavelengths of light indicated that flowering is regulated by the antagonistic actions of phyB and cry2.


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