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First published online April 30, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.039453 Plant Physiology 135:201-211 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Extensive Phenotypic Variation in Early Flowering Mutants of Arabidopsis1Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, F78026 Versailles cedex, France
Flowering time, the major regulatory transition of plant sequential development, is modulated by multiple endogenous and environmental factors. By phenotypic profiling of 80 early flowering mutants of Arabidopsis, we examine how mutational reduction of floral repression is associated with changes in phenotypic plasticity and stability. Flowering time measurements in mutants reveal deviations from the linear relationship between the number of leaves and number of days to bolting described for natural accessions and late flowering mutants. The deviations correspond to relative early bolting and relative late bolting phenotypes. Only a minority of mutants presents no detectable phenotypic variation. Mutants are characterized by a broad release of morphological pleiotropy under short days, with leaf characters being most variable. They also exhibit changes in phenotypic plasticity across environments for florigenic-related responses, including the reaction to light and dark, photoperiodic behavior, and Suc sensitivity. Morphological pleiotropy and plasticity modifications are differentially distributed among mutants, resulting in a large diversity of multiple phenotypic changes. The pleiotropic effects observed may indicate that floral repression defects are linked to global developmental perturbations. This first, to our knowledge, extensive characterization of phenotypic variation in early flowering mutants correlates with the reports that most factors recruited in floral repression at the molecular genetic level correspond to ubiquitous regulators. We discuss the importance of functional ubiquity for floral repression with respect to robustness and flexibility of network biological systems.
1 This work, V.F., and F.P. were supported by the European Union (grant no. BI04CT972340). G.Z. received a Chinese Government fellowship.
2 Present address: Physiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire des Plantes, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 4 Place Jussieu, F75252
3 Present address: Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, South Park Road, Oxford OX1 3RB, UK.
4 Present address: College of Life Science and Biotechnology, Shanghai JiaoTong University, Mihang Dongchuan Road 800, Shanghai 200240, China.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.039453.
* Corresponding author; e-mail sylvie.pouteau{at}versailles.inra.fr; fax 330130833099.
Received January 19, 2004;
returned for revision February 19, 2004;
accepted February 25, 2004.
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