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Plant Physiol, July 2001, Vol. 126, pp. 1031-1041
The Delayed Terminal Flower Phenotype Is Caused by a Conditional
Mutation in the CENTRORADIALIS Gene of Snapdragon
Frédéric
Cremer,*
Wolf-Ekkehard
Lönnig,
Heinz
Saedler, and
Peter
Huijser
Max-Planck Institut für Züchtungsforschung,
Carl-von-Linné Weg 10, 50829 Köln, Germany
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ABSTRACT |
The snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus)
centroradialis mutant (cen) is
characterized by the development of a terminal flower, thereby replacing the normally open inflorescence by a closed inflorescence. In
contrast to its Arabidopsis counterpart, terminal
flower1, the cen-null mutant displays an almost
constant number of lateral flowers below the terminal flower. Some
partial revertants of an X-radiation-induced cen mutant
showed a delayed formation of the terminal flower, resulting in a
variable number of lateral flowers. The number of lateral flowers
formed was shown to be environmentally controlled, with the fewer
flowers formed under the stronger flower-inducing conditions. Plants
displaying this "Delayed terminal flower" phenotype were found to
be heterozygous for a mutant allele carrying a transposon in the coding
region and an allele from which the transposon excised, leaving behind a 3-bp duplication as footprint. As a consequence, an iso-leucine is
inserted between Asp148 and Gly149 in the CENTRORADIALIS protein. It is
proposed that this mutation results in a low level of functional CEN
activity, generating a phenotype that is more similar to the Arabidopsis Terminal flower phenotype.
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INTRODUCTION |
Racemose inflorescences can be
divided into two classes based on the presence or the absence of a
terminal flower. These inflorescences are described either as closed
and open or as determinate and indeterminate (Weberling, 1989 ). Two
major model species for the study of plant development, Arabidopsis and
snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus), are characterized by an
indeterminate raceme. In both species, mutants presenting a
determinate inflorescence are known: terminal flower1 and
2 (tfl1, tfl2) in Arabidopsis and
centroradialis (cen) in snapdragon (Shannon and
Meeks-Wagner, 1991 ; Alvarez et al., 1992 ; Bradley et al., 1996 ;
Larsson et al., 1998 ). The CENTRORADIALIS gene was
cloned after transposon tagging by Bradley et al. (1996) and the
TERMINAL FLOWER1 gene has been cloned by homology to the cen gene by the same group (Bradley et al., 1997 ) and by
T-DNA tagging by Ohshima et al. (1997) . The encoded proteins
show similarities to phosphatidylethanolamine-binding proteins
(PEBP). Members of this family of proteins are known to have a strong
affinity for hydrophobic ligands like phospholipids with a preference
for phosphatidylethanolamine (Schoentgen and Jolles, 1995 ).
They have also been shown to bind to GTP in vitro and to GTP-binding
proteins (Bucquoy et al., 1994 ). The human PEBP Raf kinase inhibitor
protein recently has been shown to bind to Raf-1, MEK, and ERK, three
kinases, and to inhibit the phosphorylation and activation of MEK by
Raf-1 (Yeung et al., 1999 ). This suggests a role for PEBPs in signaling pathways.
Regarding the influence of the PEBP proteins on inflorescence
structure, the Cen and Tfl1 mutants do not show fully identical phenotypes. In snapdragon, the CEN gene seems to control
only the indeterminate fate of the inflorescence, whereas in
Arabidopsis TFL1 has an additional effect on flowering time.
Furthermore, the number of lateral flowers seems to be more or less
constant in centroradialis (F. Cremer, H. Saedler, and P. Huijser , unpublished data), but it is affected by the
environment in terminal flower1. High temperature (Alvarez
et al., 1992 ) and long days (Shannon and Meeks-Wagner, 1991 )
both reduce the number of lateral flowers formed by different mutant
alleles of TFL1, from which at least tfl1-2
represents a null allele (Ohshima et al., 1997 ).
In this paper, we describe a new allele of CENTRORADIALIS
resulting in a mutant phenotype displaying one of the additional features of the tfl1 mutant, which is a variable number of
lateral flowers in response to environmental changes. The reduced
activity of this conditional allele is correlated with the
three-dimensional structure of the CENTRORADIALIS protein (Banfield and
Brady, 2000 ) and suggests that different genes are involved in the
control of determinacy in the Arabidopsis and snapdragon inflorescences.
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RESULTS |
The Dtf Phenotype Is Due to a Mutation in the CEN Gene
A plant with a Cen mutant phenotype appeared in progeny raised
after an x-ray mutagenesis of F1 seeds obtained
from a cross between the commercial snapdragon cv Snowman
and the inbred line T53 (Harrison and Carpenter, 1973 ). This plant was
shown to be homozygous for a new cen mutant allele that we
named cen-2 after a complementation test with the
traditional Gatersleben mutant allele.
Among several hundreds of plants in progenies of self-pollinated
cen-2 plants, four wild-type-looking plants appeared,
suggesting that the cen-2 allele was unstable. Genetic
instability due to active endogenous transposons residing at mutated
loci is well documented in snapdragon (Harrison and Fincham, 1964 ;
Kunze et al., 1997 ). The progenies of these four putative revertants
gave similar results and will not be referred to separately later on. As expected for true revertant plants, Cen and wild-type plants segregated in these progenies. However, puzzling observations were made
later when quite a large proportion of the plants that had been
initially scored as having either a mutant or a wild-type phenotype
based on their main inflorescence did show the opposite phenotype for
their secondary inflorescences. Furthermore, inflorescence development
in some wild-type-looking plants ceased prematurely after some 20 to 50 flowers. Moreover, one plant formed a fully developed terminal flower
after 37 lateral flowers. This phenotype, designated Delayed terminal
flower (Dtf), is presented in Figure 1A.
From this time onward, we decided to check every plant repeatedly and
to dissect the apex of every inflorescence arrested in its development.
This allowed us to show that a large proportion of the plants with an
arrested inflorescence initiated a terminal flower that aborted early
in development (Fig. 1B). In a second generation obtained by selfing,
the plants that had consistently displayed a Cen mutant phenotype gave
only mutant progenies with developed terminal flowers, plants that had
consistently presented a wild-type phenotype without an aborted
terminal flower gave only wild-type progenies, and progeny of the
plants that had displayed the Dtf phenotype segregated in the same way
as the progeny of the original revertants. These segregation ratios
indicated that the Dtf phenotype was caused by heterozygosity at the
locus involved and that the four putative revertant plants should have
already been Dtf plants. We did not observe this initially because we sampled the plants before they developed secondary
inflorescences.

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Figure 1.
Conditional phenotype of
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. A, The Cen mutant
phenotype (right) shows 11 lateral flowers and was obtained by growing
a cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plant in 16-h light at 25°C
under 20,000 lux of VHO light (see "Materials and
Methods"). In contrast, the same genotype grown in 16-h light at
20°C under 9,000 lux of VHO light results in a Dtf phenotype
(center), showing 42 lateral flowers before the terminal flower. A
Sippe 50 wild-type plant grown under the latter conditions is shown for
comparison (left). Note that under these conditions a few lateral
flowers did not develop and that the older lateral flowers already
dropped before the terminal flower of the Dtf plant fully opened. B,
Close-up of an aborted terminal flower of a Dtf plant. As observed for
some lateral flowers, the terminal flower of Dtf plants often aborts,
mimicking an indeterminate inflorescence that has ceased development.
C, Schematic representation of the wild-type (wt),
cen-2/cen-2, and
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants under different growing
conditions.
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We speculated that the Dtf phenotype could be due to: (a) a new allele
of CEN, (b) another gene that would mask the Cen mutant phenotype by delaying the formation of the terminal flower, or (c)
another terminal flower-causing mutation that would be unmasked by
cen reversion. Therefore, Dtf plants were crossed to the
wild-type inbred line Sippe 50 and the segregating
F2 progeny were analyzed. The absence of Dtf
plants in the F2 suggested that the Dtf phenotype was due to heterozygosity involving the cen-2 mutant
allele and a new mutant allele derived from it as a result of partial
reversion, or that the second locus would be tightly linked to the
CEN locus.
Using the CEN cDNA as a probe, it could be confirmed
molecularly that the Dtf phenotype is due to heterozygosity of the
cen-2 allele and a partially reverted allele
we will refer to as cen-2r(dtf). In addition, phenotypically
wild-type plants proved to be homozygous for cen-2r(dtf) as
can be seen on Figure 2.

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Figure 2.
Dtf plants are heterozygous for the CEN
gene. Autoradiograph of a Southern blot probed with the 700-bp 5' end
of CEN cDNA. 1, cen-2 plants; 2, dtf
plants; 3, homozygous revertants. DNA was cut with
EcoRI.
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To check if the strong cen-2 allele has a specific role in
the Dtf phenotype, we crossed homozygous cen-2r(dtf) plants
with the traditional Gatersleben cen mutant, homozygous for
the cen-594 allele (Bradley et al., 1996 ). The presence of
Dtf plants in the F1 indicated that the strong
allele has no specificity of itself and that the Dtf phenotype only
depends on specific features of the cen-2r(dtf) allele.
cen/cen-2r(dtf) Confers a Conditional
centroradialis Phenotype
The variable number of lateral flowers observed on Dtf plants
suggested that changes in the environment influenced the phenotype. Therefore, we compared the flowering behavior of
cen-2/cen-2, cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) and
cen-2r(dtf)/cen-2r(dtf) genotypes under different
growth conditions. cen-2/cen-2 plants were
compared with cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) at different
temperatures, day lengths, light intensities, and light qualities.
Figure 3A shows that flowering time
behaved as expected from earlier experiments with the Sippe 50 inbred
line (Cremer et al., 1998 ). Under all conditions,
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) tended to flower slightly
earlier than cen-2/cen-2, with statistically significant differences observed for conditions 3, 5, 6, and 7 as
described in the legend of Figure 3. Under the same conditions, the
cen-2/cen-2 plants had a constant LFN (Fig. 3B),
with the exception of condition 7 (Fig. 3) where a statistically
significant reduction in LFN was observed. Under the weak inductive
conditions 1, 2, and 3 (Fig. 3) cen-2/cen-2r(dtf)
plants did not produce a terminal flower before they died or ceased
further development of their inflorescence. A terminal flower was made
under all other conditions, with LFN being notably reduced under
condition 7 (Fig. 3) to only 11 lateral flowers. Under all conditions,
the LFN of cen-2/cen-2 was significantly smaller
than that of cen-2/cen-2r(dtf). Because the LFN
of cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) was only affected under very good growing conditions, a second experiment with
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) was carried out at 25°C. The
effect of light intensity, light quality, and day length on flowering
time, TLN, and LFN are presented in Figure 3C. A parallel decrease in
all three variables was observed with improving growth conditions, with
LFN decreasing from 56 to 11. These experiments clearly demonstrated
that the cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants show a
conditional centroradialis phenotype, appearing wild type
under weak flower-inducing conditions, like the Cen mutant under
strongly inductive conditions, and like Dtf under intermediate
conditions. We also checked the effect of cen-2r(dtf) homozygosity on the phenotype of plants when grown under different conditions. None of the cen-2r(dtf)/cen-2r(dtf)
plants formed a terminal flower under conditions 5 and 6 described in
the legend of Figure 3. Under conditions identical to conditions 10 and
11 of Figure 3, one out of 15 plants made a terminal flower after 40 and 35 lateral flowers, respectively; four out of 15 under conditions
13 (LFN = 40.5); and nine out of 15 under condition 7 (LFN = 44.3). Thus, under strong flower-inducing conditions, some
cen-2r(dtf)/cen-2r(dtf) plants may develop a Dtf
phenotype. Concerning their flowering time,
cen-2r(dtf)/cen-2r(dtf) plants flowered sometimes
earlier, sometimes later than the
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants, without a significant
difference.

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Figure 3.
Influence of growth conditions on Dtf and
Cen mutant phenotypes. Influence of growth conditions on flowering
time, leaf number, and number of lateral flowers of
cen-2/cen-2 and
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. Each bar represents the
mean of the series, error bars represent the SE.
Flowering time (days), total leaf number (TLN), and lateral flower
number (LFN) are on the ordinate. Growth conditions on the abscissa
are: 1, 8-h light, 12°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO; 2, 8-h light, 15°C,
9,000 lux, and VHO; 3, 8-h light, 20°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO; 4, 16-h
light, 20°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO; 5, 16-h light, 20°C, 15,000 lux,
and VHO; 6, 16-h light, 20°C, 15,000 lux, and VHO + 2I; 7, 20-h light, 25°C, 30,000 lux, and VHO + 2I; 8, 16-h light, 25°C,
9,000 lux, and VHO; 9, 16-h light, 25°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO + 2I; 10, 16-h light, 25°C, 15,000 lux, and VHO; 11, 16-h light, 25°C, 15,000 lux, and VHO + 2I; 12, 16-h light, 25°C, 30,000 lux, and VHO; and 13, 16-h light, 25°C, 30,000 lux, and VHO + 2I. See "Materials and
Methods" for details of the conditions. A, Influence on flowering
time. Black bars are for cen-2/cen-2 plants, gray
bars for cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. B, Influence
on number of lateral flowers. Bars are as in A. C, Influence on
flowering time, leaf number, and number of lateral flowers of
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. Black bars are for
flowering time, dark-gray bars for TLN, and light-gray bars for
LFN.
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Changing Growing Conditions Can Trigger the Formation of the
Terminal Flower
To check at what time the decision is made to form the terminal
flower, environmental shift experiments have been carried out with the
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. In a first set of
experiments, plants were shifted from less inductive low-light
conditions (16-h light, 25°C, VHO + 2I, and 9,000 lux; see
"Materials and Methods") to more inductive high-light conditions
(idem, 30,000 lux) after 0, 5, 10, or 15 d following the
macroscopic appearance of the first flower buds or, alternatively, 0, 10, or 20 d following anthesis. Control plants were not shifted
and remained under 9,000 lux. According to the Kruskal-Wallis
statistical test, none of the series showed a significant difference
for flowering time, TLN, and LFN. The values varied respectively from
64.3 ± 4.3 to 67.4 ± 2.1 d, 28.8 ± 5.6 to
32.3 ± 5.6 leaves, and 28.8 ± 12.4 to 36.4 ± 6.8 lateral flowers. These results indicated that the LFN was determined
prior to the macroscopic appearance of the flower buds.
In a second experiment, starting conditions less favorable for
flowering were chosen (16 h, 20°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO). Starting at
the third week after sowing, every week until week 17, a batch of
plants was shifted to more inductive conditions (16 h, 25°C, 30,000 lux, and VHO + 2I). The influence of the transfer date on flowering
time, TLN, and LFN is presented in Figure
4. The evolvement of TLN indicated that
plants became determined to flower before week 13 under the less
inductive conditions. Flowering time increased until the 14th week,
indicating an effect of the growing conditions on flower development.
Plants that were shifted before week 8 developed a Cen mutant
phenotype, and those shifted thereafter developed a Dtf phenotype.
One-way analysis of variance-on-ranks according to Kruskal-Wallis,
followed by pair-wise comparisons with the Mann-Whitney test (Weber,
1986 ), indicated that LFN increased until week 16, when it reaches the
level observed in control plants. These results indicate that the
formation of the terminal flower can be induced by a shift to more
inductive conditions, even when the plant is already determined to
flower.

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Figure 4.
Induction of the terminal flower formation.
Influence of a shift from less inductive conditions to more inductive
conditions on flowering time (A), leaf number (B), and number of
lateral flowers (C) of cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants.
Plants were shifted every week from the less inductive conditions (16-h
light, 20°C, 9,000 lux, and VHO) to the more inductive conditions
(16-h light, 25°C, 30,000 lux, and VHO + 2I), starting on the 3rd
week after sowing till the 17th week. Each bar represents the mean of
the series, error bars represent the SE.
Flowering time in days (A), TLN (B), and LFN (C) are on the ordinate.
The number of weeks spent in the less inductive conditions is on the
abscissa. See "Materials and Methods" for the growing conditions
details.
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The cen-2r(dtf) Allele Contains a Footprint Due to a
Transposon Excision
Based on a 4.4-kb preliminary sequence of the CEN
promoter, kindly provided by Dr. Desmond Bradley (The Sainsbury
Laboratory, Norwich, UK), and the published CEN cDNA
sequence, we were able to design primers and to sequence 6 kb of the
CEN wild-type allele of line 164, a derivative of the 165E
line from which the preliminary sequence originated. Based on the
definitive sequence we obtained, we amplified, sequenced, and compared
the corresponding region of the cen-2r(dtf) mutant allele.
It was unexpected that many differences were detected in the form of
deletions, insertions, and base changes, most differences appearing in
intron sequences. Base changes in the coding region of the
cen-2r(dtf) allele result in modification of the CEN protein
at positions 5 (Val Ile), 28 (Lys Gln), and 35 (Ser Ala).
Furthermore, a 3-bp insertion in frame leads to the addition of an
iso-Leu between Asp148 and Gly149. Because of the large number of
differences between the 164 wild type and the cen-2r(dtf)
locus, we sequenced the CEN allele from Snowman,
which was one of the parents of the mutagenized line and whose
F1 with cen-2 never formed a terminal
flower. This allele was identical to the cen-2r(dtf) allele
except for the 3-bp insertion noted earlier. Therefore, we assumed that
this insertion was responsible for the Dtf phenotype and was due to the
excision of a transposon leaving a 3-bp footprint. To
obtain sequence from this transposon, DNA of cen-2
homozygous plants was used as template for a thermal asymmetric
interlaced-PCR reaction (Liu et al., 1995 ), with three primers
located 5' to the 3-bp insertion identified in the revertant plants.
The fragment obtained contained part of the left terminus of a new
member of the CACTA transposable element family (Kunze et al., 1997 ;
Fig. 5). This element, inserted in the
cen-2 allele at the same position as the 3-bp insertion in
the cen-2r(dtf) allele, was named Tam10. It is responsible
for the cen-2 mutation and its insertion could be due to the
x-ray mutagenesis treatment. Its sequence was most similar to the right
end of the Tam9 element, with which it shares 77% of identity in the
first 120 bp (Tröbner et al., 1992 ). Using primers designed from
the left terminal sequence of Tam9 and a primer located 3' of the
insertion site in the cen-2 allele, we were able to amplify
and determine the 69-bp terminal sequence of the right end of Tam10.
Only one mismatch and one base insertion compared with the Tam9
sequence were found.

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Figure 5.
Schematic representation of 6.4 kb of the
CEN locus in the 164 wild-type line. The four exons are
boxed with a thick line; start and stop codons are indicated. The Tam12
transposon insertion present in the Snowman wild-type allele is
represented above the main bar, together with partial sequences of the
transposon ends. The Tam10 transposon present in the cen-2
allele is shown below the main bar with partial sequences of the
cen-2 allele, the CEN wild-type allele, and the
cen-2r(dtf) partially revertant allele. The 3-bp footprint
responsible for the Dtf phenotype is indicated by a small white
triangle. Arrows below the sequence indicate direct repeats, above the
sequence inverted repeats.
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To establish the nature of the footprints that are able to generate a
Dtf phenotype, two other independent revertant alleles were sequenced
between primers F14 and B14b. Both revealed a footprint identical to
the cen-2r(dtf) allele footprint (Fig. 5). It is interesting
that according to the excision mechanism proposed by Saedler and Nevers
(1985) , alternative 3-bp addition footprints could also be expected,
resulting in the incorporation of an Asp or a Tyr instead of an
iso-Leu. Because none of these alternative events occurred in the
three revertants analyzed, they are either less common or result in a
null allele that therefore would not be detected as revertant.
Furthermore, from all the plants we have grown, no excision
reestablishing the correct sequence and giving a true wild-type plant
has been observed.
As mentioned above, the Snowman allele strongly differs from the 164 allele. It is interesting that the most notable difference between
these two wild-type alleles is the presence of a 1.9-kb insertion in
the Snowman allele 580 bp upstream of the ATG start codon (Fig. 5).
This insertion is flanked by a 17-bp direct repeat likely to be the
result of a target site duplication upon insertion of a transposon. The
left end of this transposon contains 9 bp that are an inverted repeat
of the target site, followed by a 6-bp inverted repeat from base 12 to
23. No long terminal repeat, additional inverted repeat, poly-A tail,
nor candidate open reading frame is found in the transposon sequence.
On the right end, the sequence did not reveal any notable features.
These characteristics did not allow us to assign this transposon to any
of the known classes of transposable elements. A genomic blot with DNA
from different lines of snapdragon probed with this fragment gave a complex pattern, indicating that the element represents a family with a
high number of heterogeneously sized transposons (data not shown). This
element has been named Tam12, according to the Antirrhinum
majus community usage.
Three-Dimensional Structure of the CEN Protein
The recently published structure of the CENTRORADIALIS protein
(Banfield and Brady, 2000 ) shows that the Asp148-Gly149 region is in
close contact and forming H bonds with the Glu89-His90 region. Figure
6A shows this region of the protein coded
by the Snowman allele. This region has a sequence identical to the
published protein and has a very similar three-dimensional structure
(data not shown). The corresponding region in the bovine protein has been shown to contact phosphorylethanolamine, the polar head group of
phosphatidylethanolamine (Serre et al., 1998 ), and is the putative ligand-binding site in the bovine and human proteins (Banfield et al.,
1998 ; Serre et al., 1998 ). In the CEN protein, Glu89 forms a
cis-peptide bond with Arg88 and the Glu89 side chain forms H bonds with
Thr152 (Banfield and Brady, 2000 ). As suggested by structure prediction
using the SWISS-MODEL program (Guex and Peitsch, 1997 ), the iso-Leu
insertion between Asp148 and Gly149 will modify the intramolecular
bonds in this region (Fig. 6C). As a result, the affinity to the ligand
is probably modified. The inserted iso-Leu also modifies the protein
surface (Fig. 6, B and D) and could influence putative protein-protein
interactions (Banfield and Brady, 2000 ).

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Figure 6.
Stereo view of the ligand binding site in
CENTRORADIALIS as predicted by Swiss model. A and B, The Snowman
protein; C and D, the Dtf protein. A and C, An iso-Leu (orange) is
inserted in the Dtf protein between Asp148 and Gly149 (green) of the
Snowman protein. In Snowman, the chain from Arg147 to Thr152 forms
numerous H bonds (dotted red lines) with the amino acids forming the
ligand pocket and their neighbors, as well as with the evolutionary
conserved Glu89 that seems to control access to the ligand pocket
(Banfield and Brady, 2000 ). The Ile insertion in Dtf is predicted to
affect the H bonds. B and D, Molecular surface corresponding to the
region seen in A and C. The surface seems only affected in the vicinity
of the iso-Leu inserted in the Dtf protein.
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DISCUSSION |
Inflorescence Architecture
Determinacy/indeterminacy of the inflorescence is usually a stable
character and is often used in species identification. In several
species, occasional conversions of an indeterminate into a determinate
inflorescence have been reported (Penzig, 1922 ), but the heritability
of these transformations has rarely been studied. Only in a few species
have these transformations been shown to be due to mutations (Bradley
et al., 1996 , 1997 ). On the other hand, to our knowledge, the
transformation from a determinate to an indeterminate inflorescence has
not been described. This is in support of Troll's typological
classification, with indeterminate inflorescences derived from
determinate inflorescences (Troll, 1964 ; Troll, 1969 ), due to the gain
of a new function preventing the central part of the inflorescence
apical meristem from differentiating into a floral meristem. Yet, from
a strictly empirical point of view and in line with Troll's model,
there is also the possibility that at least some naturally occurring
determinate inflorescences could be derived from indeterminate ones,
due to a subsequent loss of the indeterminacy function, as demonstrated
by all known mutants. Many examples for losses of functions in the wild
are given by Fong et al. (1995) , Kunze et al. (1997) , and Lönnig and Saedler (1997) .
In snapdragon and Arabidopsis, the gain of indeterminate inflorescence
involved the acquisition of the CEN and TFL1
function (Bradley et al., 1996 , 1997 ). Putative null alleles of these
genes result in the transformation of the apical meristem into a
terminal flower (Bradley et al., 1996 , 1997 ; Ohshima et al.,
1997 ). However, there should be a slight difference in their
mode of action because certain aspects of the mutant phenotypes differ
in the two species. Furthermore, when the two genes are transformed
into an identical background in tobacco, only CEN is able to affect the
phenotype of the transgenic plants (Amaya et al., 1999 ). In addition to its effect on flowering time, not observed with CEN (Cremer
et al., 1998 ), the loss of TFL1 function results in the development of
a variable number of lateral flowers in response to different growth
conditions (Shannon and Meeks-Wagner, 1991 ; Alvarez et al., 1992 ). Null
alleles of cen are known to form their terminal flower after
a more or less constant number of lateral flowers (Bradley et al.,
1996 ) irrespective of the environment (F. Cremer, H. Saedler, and P. Huijser, unpublished data).
In this paper, we describe a conditional allele of CEN,
cen-2r(dtf), that also results, when in a heterozygous combination with a null allele, in a variable number of lateral flowers in response
to different growth conditions, like the loss of TFL1 function (Shannon and Meeks-Wagner, 1991 ; Alvarez et al., 1992 ). Under
strong flower-inducing conditions, this heterozygous combination results in a Cen-null mutant phenotype. Under weak flower-inducing conditions, a wild-type phenotype is obtained. Grown in intermediate conditions, a new phenotype is observed, displaying a determinate inflorescence with a variable number of lateral flowers. The number of
lateral flowers varies from 10 to more than 50 and is negatively correlated with the flower-inducing strength of the growing conditions. Therefore, we refer to this phenotype as Delayed terminal flower. It is
surprising that the Dtf plants also flower a little bit earlier than
the Cen mutant plants, but this character is not always found in the
plants homozygous for the revertant allele. This erratic behavior could
be due to unknown genes segregating in the background and originating
in the Snowman and T53 lines used for the mutagenesis.
Partial Reversion of the cen-2 Allele Resulted in a
Conditional Allele
Molecular analysis of cen-2r(dtf) revealed that it
arose from a transposon excision leaving behind a 3-bp insertion
footprint. As a result, an iso-Leu is added to the encoded CEN protein
between Asp148 and Gly149. This presumably modifies the affinity for
the ligand, e.g. phosphatidylethanolamine, another phospholipid or a
kinase, as proposed by Banfield and Brady (2000) , by comparison to the
direct interaction of the human PEBP and the Raf-1 kinase (Yeung et
al., 1999 ). Because the modification involves part of the outer surface
of the CEN protein, it cannot be ruled out that a yet unknown
protein-protein interaction would be affected. The transposon excision
and the 3-bp addition thus appears to partially restore CEN function.
Moreover, the better the growing conditions the less the
cen-2r(dtf) allele seems to be functional, and a terminal
flower may be formed as quickly as in a genuine null mutant. It is
interesting that the decline in functionality depends not only on
temperature but also on day length and light intensity. Therefore, we
believe that the conditional phenotype is not due to a modified
thermostability of the mutant protein. Instead, we propose that the
conditional phenotype is subject to the strength of the flower
promoting activity represented by floral meristem identity genes like
FLORICAULA (FLO; Coen et al., 1990 ) and
SQUAMOSA (SQUA; Huijser et al., 1992 ). In
Arabidopsis, constitutive expression of the respective orthologs,
LEAFY (LFY) and APETALA1
(AP1), leads to the formation of a terminal flower (Mandel
and Yanofsky, 1995 ; Weigel and Nilsson, 1995 ). Furthermore,
constitutive expression of LFY or AP1 has been
shown to repress TFL1 expression (Liljegren et al., 1999 ;
Ratcliffe et al., 1999 ), demonstrating the antagonistic roles of the
TFL1 and the LFY/AP1 functions. The transition to flowering has been shown to be at least partly controlled by the level
of LFY expression and this level has been shown to be
increased under stronger flower-inducing conditions (Blazquez et al.,
1997 ). We may assume that a similar mechanism acts in snapdragon. Due to a reduced level or function of the CEN-2R(DTF) protein in
cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants, FLO and
SQUA would be able to overcome their inhibition by
CEN in the central part of the apical meristem under
stronger flower promoting conditions. In cen-2r(dtf)
homozygous plants, the function of the CEN protein [CEN-2R(DTF)] is
still reduced compared with wild type, but its level may be twice as
high compared with cen-2/cen-2r(dtf) plants. It
is only under extremely good inductive conditions, and only in a few
plants, that the CEN inhibition of FLO and SQUA
activity can be overcome in these homozygous plants. Moreover, this is
achieved very late in inflorescence development, when the COPS activity
is believed to reach a low level according to the model of
Schultz and Haughn (1993) . According to this model, COPS
activity decreases with node production and, at critical levels,
morphological programs associated with a phase change are activated, in
this case the formation of a terminal flower. It is unfortunate that
the large variability in the timing of the terminal flower formation in
Dtf plants under controlled growth conditions precluded testing the
above hypothesis by quantifying the level of squa and flo expression in
the shoot apical meristem.
The Dtf Phenotype Mimics Aspects of the Arabidopsis
tfl1 Mutation
In Arabidopsis, the tfl1 mutants, including the
tfl1-2-null mutant (Ohshima et al., 1997 ), are early
flowering and form a variable number of lateral flowers under different
growth conditions (Shannon and Meeks-Wagner, 1991 ; Alvarez et al.,
1992 ). In snapdragon, the flowering time of Dtf, like that of
cen-null mutants, remains largely unaffected. This
difference in flowering behavior can be easily explained at the level
of transcription, with CEN becoming expressed in the shoot
apical meristem only after its commitment to produce flowers, whereas
TFL1 is already expressed during vegetative growth (Bradley
et al., 1996 , 1997 ).
With respect to the variable number of lateral flowers, the Dtf
phenotype of snapdragon resembles more the Tfl1-null mutant phenotype
than does the Cen-null mutant phenotype. As in tfl1, the
number of lateral flowers made before the terminal flower is variable
in Dtf, and this seems to be due to a low level of functional CEN activity.
This suggests that in Arabidopsis additional genes may act in parallel
to TFL1 to repress LFY and AP1
expression in the apical meristem. A candidate for this function is the
TFL2 gene. Like tfl1, tfl2 mutants
form a terminal flower and are early flowering, but they also display a
dwarfed phenotype and a reduced sensitivity to the photoperiod (Larsson
et al., 1998 ). They generate a larger number of lateral flowers
compared with tfl1 but the double mutant tfl1/tfl2 does not develop any lateral flowers. This
observation supports the hypothesis that the tfl1 null
mutant can still develop a variable number of lateral flowers due to
partial functional redundancy of (an) other gene(s). The difference in
phenotype between tfl1 and cen could be explained
by this mechanism, but the mutant phenotype of the Arabidopsis
ARABIDOPSIS THALIANA CENTRORADIALIS (ATC) gene,
which currently seems to be the best candidate to represent the true
CEN orthologue (GenBank accession no. AB024715), would be helpful in clarifying this model. If TFL1 and
TFL2 act in two parallel pathways, it is possible that
ATC would be downstream of one or both of these genes and
that a mutation in ATC would also result in the production
of a terminal flower. On the other hand, other members of the PEBP
family are known in Arabidopsis that are not involved in the control of
the inflorescence meristem identity, like FLOWERING LOCUS T
(FT; Araki et al., 1998 ; Kardailsky et al., 1999 ; Kobayashi
et al., 1999 ) and TWIN SISTER OF FT (TSF; Kardailsky et al., 1999 ; Kobayashi et al., 1999 ).
To further characterize the differences and similarities between
CEN and TFL1, it would be interesting to find out
which aspects of the Tfl1 mutant phenotype can be complemented by the
cen-2r(dtf) and the wild type CEN alleles of
snapdragon in transgenic Arabidopsis.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
A new allele of CENTRORADIALIS was obtained in an
M2 after x-ray mutagenesis of F1 seeds from a cross between
the snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus) F1
commercial cv Snowman (wild type for the CEN gene and
heterozygote for different flower color genes) and the inbred line T53
(Harrison and Carpenter, 1973 ). This new allele was designated
cen-2 after a complementation test with the traditional Gatersleben mutant allele, referred to by Bradley et al. (1996) as
cen-594. Seeds of the Sippe-50 wild-type inbred line
were obtained from Gatersleben (Germany) and propagated by selfing for
several generations. It is the background in which the
cen-1 allele has been isolated. The 164 wild-type line
is a revertant of the 165E (niv-98::Tam3) line
(Sommer et al., 1985 ). Stocks were grown in the greenhouse. For
physiological experiments, plants were grown in the phytotronic growth
chambers of the University of Liège (Belgium) as
previously described (Cremer et al., 1998 ). Day length varied from 8 to
20 h, temperature from 12°C to 25°C, light intensity from
9,000 lux (140 µmol m 2 s 1) to 30,000 lux
(390 µmol m 2 s 1), and light quality was
either VHO or VHO + 2I (Cremer et al., 1998 ). VHO light was provided by
Cool White VHO fluorescent tubes (Sylvania S.A., Zaventem, Belgium).
VHO + 2I light corresponded to the addition of incandescent light
provided by two 40-W incandescent bulbs per pair of 36-W VHO tubes.
Time to anthesis of the first flower (flowering time), the number of
leaves below the first flower on the main stem (TLN), and the number of
lateral flowers were scored. The LFN preceding the terminal flower
includes fully developed flowers as well as every flower bud detectable
under a dissecting microscope. All experiments were duplicated.
Repeated measurements were pooled before analysis. The
Kolmogorov-Smirnov test of normality (Weber, 1986 ) failed at the 5%
level for some of the series and therefore we decided to use
non-parametric tests for later analysis. One-way analysis of variance
on ranks according to Kruskal-Wallis (Weber, 1986 ) has been used to
check for the influence of growing conditions. When statistically
significant differences where observed, pair-wise comparisons have been
done using the Mann-Whitney test on ranks (Weber, 1986 ). All
statistical tests were performed using the Sigmastat 2.0 software (SPSS
ASC, Erkrath, Germany).
Molecular Biology Techniques
DNA extraction from young leaves, Southern blotting, probes
labeling, and hybridization were performed as described by Sommer et
al. (1990) . All oligonucleotides used for this work were synthesized by
MWG-Biotech (Ebersberg, Germany) or GibcoBRL Life Technologies (Eggenstein, Germany). Standard PCR reactions started at 94°C for 5 min followed by 30 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 62°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min and ended at 72°C for 5 min. Thermal
asymmetric interlaced-PCR was performed according to published
protocol (Liu et al., 1995 ). PCR fragments were purified using QIAquick
Spin columns (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) and sequenced on
PE/Applied Biosystems 377 and 3700 sequencers using BigDye-terminator
chemistry. DNA sequence analysis was performed using the MacVector 6.5 computer program package (Oxford Molecular, Oxford). Transposon
excision footprint were checked by sequencing PCR fragments obtained
with primers F14 5'-GAG CTA TGA GAT GCC AAG GCC GAA C-3' and B14b
5'-CCA TTT CTC CAT CTT TTC CTT C-3'. The sequence of the
CEN alleles of the 164 wild-type line and of the cv
Snowman have been submitted to the EMBL database under the accession
nos. AJ251993 and AJ251994.
Molecular Modeling
The three-dimensional models of the Snowman wild type and Dtf
mutant CEN proteins have been generated by homology modeling. The
three-dimensional template structure has been the CEN protein, Brookhaven protein database code 1QOUB (Banfield and Brady, 2000 ), and
the calculations were done with the homology modeling package Swiss-model (Guex and Peitsch, 1997 ; http://www.expasy.ch/swissmod/). PDB Viewer 3.5 (Guex and Peitsch, 1997 ; http://www.expasy.ch/spdbv/) has been used to compute H bonds and for three-dimensional model visualization. Final graphics were prepared with POV Ray version 3.1g
(http://www.povray.org/). Numbering of amino acids corresponds to the
CEN sequence published by Bradley et al. (1996) .
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Dr. Andrée Havelange and Emile Kurtem
for phytotronic plant culture and to Dr. Desmond Bradley for providing the CEN probe and a preliminary sequence of the
CEN promoter. We would also like to thank Drs. Laurence
Serre and Mark J. Banfield for commenting on the three-dimensional
structure of the PEBP proteins and Dr. Mark Wilkinson for critically
reading the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received December 7, 2000; returned for revision January 22, 2001; accepted March 26, 2001.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail cremer{at}mpiz-koeln.mpg.de; fax
49-0221-5062-113.
 |
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