Regulation of flowering time by histone acetylation in Arabidopsis
- PMID: 14593187
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1091109
Regulation of flowering time by histone acetylation in Arabidopsis
Abstract
The Arabidopsis autonomous floral-promotion pathway promotes flowering independently of the photoperiod and vernalization pathways by repressing FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC), a MADS-box transcription factor that blocks the transition from vegetative to reproductive development. Here, we report that FLOWERING LOCUS D (FLD), one of six genes in the autonomous pathway, encodes a plant homolog of a protein found in histone deacetylase complexes in mammals. Lesions in FLD result in hyperacetylation of histones in FLC chromatin, up-regulation of FLC expression, and extremely delayed flowering. Thus, the autonomous pathway regulates flowering in part by histone deacetylation. However, not all autonomous-pathway mutants exhibit FLC hyperacetylation, indicating that multiple means exist by which this pathway represses FLC expression.
Comment in
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Plant sciences. Deciding when to flower.Science. 2003 Dec 5;302(5651):1695-6. doi: 10.1126/science.1092862. Science. 2003. PMID: 14657484 No abstract available.
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