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Characterization of New Gibberellin-Responsive Semidwarf Mutants of Arabidopsis

V. M. Sponsel, F. W. Schmidt, S. G. Porter, M. Nakayama, S. Kohlstruk, M. Estelle
V. M. Sponsel
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F. W. Schmidt
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S. G. Porter
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M. Nakayama
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S. Kohlstruk
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M. Estelle
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Published November 1997. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.115.3.1009

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Abstract

Chemical mutagenesis of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. yielded four semidwarf mutants, all of which appeared to be gibberellin (GA)-biosynthesis mutants. All four had atypical response profiles to C20-GAs, suggesting that each had impaired 20-oxidation. One mutant, 11.2, was shown to be allelic to ga5 and has been named ga5–2. It had altered metabolism of [14C]GA15 relative to that in wild-type plants and undetectable levels of C19-GAs in young stems, consistent with the known function of GA5 as a stem-expressed GA 20-oxidase. Two mutants (2.1 and 10.3), which had very short inflorescences and siliques, were allelic to each other but not to the known GA-responding mutants, ga1 to ga5. The locus defined by these two mutations is provisionally named GA6 and is purported to encode an inflorescence- and silique-expressed GA 20-oxidase. A double mutant, ga5–2 ga6–2, had an extreme dwarf phenotype with very short siliques. The fourth mutation, 1.1, gave a phenotype like ga5, but was not allelic to any of the known ga mutations. It has not yet been given a gene symbol pending further studies.

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Characterization of New Gibberellin-Responsive Semidwarf Mutants of Arabidopsis
V. M. Sponsel, F. W. Schmidt, S. G. Porter, M. Nakayama, S. Kohlstruk, M. Estelle
Plant Physiology Nov 1997, 115 (3) 1009-1020; DOI: 10.1104/pp.115.3.1009

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Characterization of New Gibberellin-Responsive Semidwarf Mutants of Arabidopsis
V. M. Sponsel, F. W. Schmidt, S. G. Porter, M. Nakayama, S. Kohlstruk, M. Estelle
Plant Physiology Nov 1997, 115 (3) 1009-1020; DOI: 10.1104/pp.115.3.1009
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Plant Physiology
Vol. 115, Issue 3
Nov 1997
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