Heterochronic Effects of Teopod 2 on the Growth and Photosensitivity of the Maize Shoot.
Author(s) -
A. Bassiri,
Erin E. Irish,
R. Scott Poethig
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.4.4.497
Subject(s) - tassel , biology , shoot , botany , heterochrony , vegetative reproduction , juvenile , meristem , horticulture , agronomy , zea mays , ontogeny , ecology , genetics
Teopod 2 (Tp2) is a semidominant mutation of maize that prolongs the expression of juvenile vegetative traits, increases the total number of leaves produced by the shoot, and transforms reproductive structures into vegetative ones. Here, we show that Tp2 prolongs the duration of vegetative growth without prolonging the overall duration of shoot growth. Mutant shoots produce leaves at the same rate as wild-type plants and continue to produce leaves after wild-type plants have initiated a tassel. Although Tp2/+ plants initiate a tassel later than their wild-type siblings, this mutant tassel ceases differentiation at the same time as, or shortly before, the primary meristem of a wild-type tassel completes its development. To investigate the relationship between the vegetative and reproductive development of the shoot, Tp2/+ and wild-type plants were exposed to floral inductive short day (SD) treatments at various stages of shoot growth. Tassel initiation in wild-type plants (which normally produced 18 to 19 leaves) was maximally sensitive to SD between plastochrons 15 and 16, whereas tassel branching was maximally sensitive to SD between plastochrons 15 and 18. Tassel initiation and tassel morphology in Tp2/+ plants (which normally produced 21 to 26 leaves) were both maximally sensitive to SD between plastochrons 15 and 18. Thus, the constitutive expression of a juvenile vegetative program in Tp2/+ plants does not significantly delay the reproductive maturation of the shoot.
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