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Temperature, light and nitrate sensing coordinate A rabidopsis seed dormancy cycling, resulting in winter and summer annual phenotypes
Author(s) -
Footitt Steven,
Huang Ziyue,
Clay Heather A.,
Mead Andrew,
FinchSavage William E.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/tpj.12186
Subject(s) - dormancy , ecotype , germination , gibberellin , phytochrome , biology , seedling , cycling , seed dormancy , phenotype , gene expression , growing season , botany , gene , genetics , red light , archaeology , history
Summary Seeds use environmental cues to sense the seasons and their surroundings to initiate the life cycle of the plant. The dormancy cycling underlying this process is extensively described, but the molecular mechanism is largely unknown. To address this we selected a range of representative genes from published array experiments in the laboratory, and investigated their expression patterns in seeds of A rabidopsis ecotypes with contrasting life cycles over an annual dormancy cycle in the field. We show how mechanisms identified in the laboratory are coordinated in response to the soil environment to determine the dormancy cycles that result in winter and summer annual phenotypes. Our results are consistent with a seed‐specific response to seasonal temperature patterns (temporal sensing) involving the gene DELAY OF GERMINATION 1 ( DOG 1 ) that indicates the correct season, and concurrent temporally driven co‐opted mechanisms that sense spatial signals, i.e. nitrate, via CBL ‐ INTERACTING PROTEIN KINASE 23 ( CIPK 23 ) phosphorylation of the NITRATE TRANSPORTER 1 ( NRT 1.1 ), and light, via PHYTOCHROME A ( PHYA ). In both ecotypes studied, when all three genes have low expression there is enhanced GIBBERELLIN 3 BETA ‐ HYDROXYLASE 1 ( GA 3ox1 ) expression, exhumed seeds have the potential to germinate in the laboratory, and the initiation of seedling emergence occurs following soil disturbance (exposure to light) in the field. Unlike DOG 1 , the expression of MOTHER of FLOWERING TIME ( MFT ) has an opposite thermal response in seeds of the two ecotypes, indicating a role in determining their different dormancy cycling phenotypes.