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Biliverdin Reductase-Induced Phytochrome Chromophore Deficiency in Transgenic Tobacco
Author(s) -
Beronda L. Montgomery,
Keara A. Franklin,
Matthew J. Terry,
Brian Thomas,
Stephen Jackson,
Marc Crepeau,
J. Clark Lagarias
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.125.1.266
Subject(s) - phytochrome , tetrapyrrole , plastid , biliverdin , biology , phytochrome a , nicotiana tabacum , biliverdin reductase , biochemistry , chloroplast , microbiology and biotechnology , arabidopsis thaliana , botany , heme , enzyme , gene , mutant , heme oxygenase , red light
Targeted expression of mammalian biliverdin IXalpha reductase (BVR), an enzyme that metabolically inactivates linear tetrapyrrole precursors of the phytochrome chromophore, was used to examine the physiological functions of phytochromes in the qualitative short-day tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Maryland Mammoth) plant. Comparative phenotypic and photobiological analyses of plastid- and cytosol-targeted BVR lines showed that multiple phytochrome-regulated processes, such as hypocotyl and internode elongation, anthocyanin synthesis, and photoperiodic regulation of flowering, were altered in all lines examined. The phytochrome-mediated processes of carotenoid and chlorophyll accumulation were strongly impaired in plastid-targeted lines, but were relatively unaffected in cytosol-targeted lines. Under certain growth conditions, plastid-targeted BVR expression was found to nearly abolish the qualitative inhibition of flowering by long-day photoperiods. The distinct phenotypes of the plastid-targeted BVR lines implicate a regulatory role for bilins in plastid development or, alternatively, reflect the consequence of altered tetrapyrrole metabolism in plastids due to bilin depletion.

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