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Pea Mutants with Reduced Sensitivity to Far-Red Light Define an Important Role for Phytochrome A in Day-Length Detection

J. L. Weller, I. C. Murfet, J. B. Reid
J. L. Weller
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I. C. Murfet
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J. B. Reid
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Published August 1997. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.114.4.1225

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Abstract

In garden pea (Pisum sativum L.), a long-day plant, long photoperiods promote flowering by reducing the synthesis or transport of a graft-transmissible inhibitor of flowering. Previous physiological studies have indicated that this promotive effect is predominantly achieved through a response that requires long exposures to light and for which far-red (FR) light is the most effective. These characteristics implicate the action of phytochrome A (phyA). To investigate this matter further, we screened ethylmethane sulfonate-mutagenized pea seedlings for FR-unresponsive, potentially phyA-deficient mutants. Two allelic, recessive mutants were isolated and were designated fun1 for FR unresponsive. The fun1–1 mutant is specifically deficient in the PHYA apoprotein and has a seedling phenotype indistinguishable from wild type when grown under white light. However, fun1–1 plants grown to maturity under long photoperiods show a highly pleiotropic phenotype, with short internodes, thickened stems, delayed flowering and senescence, longer peduncles, and higher seed yield. This phenotype results in large part from an inability of fun1–1 to detect day extensions. These results establish a crucial role for phyA in the control of flowering in pea, and show that phyA mediates responses to both red and FR light. Furthermore, grafting and epistasis studies with fun1 and dne, a mutant deficient in the floral inhibitor, show that the roles of phyA in seedling deetiolation and in day-length detection are genetically separable and that the phyA-mediated promotion of flowering results from a reduction in the synthesis or transport of the floral inhibitor.

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Pea Mutants with Reduced Sensitivity to Far-Red Light Define an Important Role for Phytochrome A in Day-Length Detection
J. L. Weller, I. C. Murfet, J. B. Reid
Plant Physiology Aug 1997, 114 (4) 1225-1236; DOI: 10.1104/pp.114.4.1225

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Pea Mutants with Reduced Sensitivity to Far-Red Light Define an Important Role for Phytochrome A in Day-Length Detection
J. L. Weller, I. C. Murfet, J. B. Reid
Plant Physiology Aug 1997, 114 (4) 1225-1236; DOI: 10.1104/pp.114.4.1225
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Plant Physiology
Vol. 114, Issue 4
Aug 1997
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More in this TOC Section

  • The rms1 Mutant of Pea Has Elevated Indole-3-Acetic Acid Levels and Reduced Root-Sap Zeatin Riboside Content but Increased Branching Controlled by Graft-Transmissible Signal(s)
  • Bacterial Cellulose-Binding Domain Modulates in Vitro Elongation of Different Plant Cells
  • Gibberellin Dose-Response Regulation of GA4 Gene Transcript Levels in Arabidopsis
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