Gibberellin regulates Arabidopsis seed germination via RGL2, a GAI/RGA-like gene whose expression is up-regulated following imbibition

  1. Sorcheng Lee1,
  2. Hui Cheng1,
  3. Kathryn E. King2,
  4. Weefuen Wang1,
  5. Yawen He1,
  6. Alamgir Hussain1,
  7. Jane Lo1,
  8. Nicholas P. Harberd2, and
  9. Jinrong Peng1,3
  1. 1Institute of Molecular Agrobiology, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117604; 2John Innes Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK

Abstract

The germination of Arabidopsis seeds is promoted by gibberellin (GA). Arabidopsis GAI, and RGA are genes encoding key GA signal-transduction components (GAI and RGA) that mediate GA regulation of stem elongation. The Arabidopsisgenome contains two further genes, RGL1 and RGL2, that encode proteins (RGL1 and RGL2) that are closely related to GAI and RGA. Here, we show that RGL2 regulates seed germination in response to GA, and that RGL1, GAI, and RGA do not. In addition, we show thatRGL2 transcript levels rise rapidly following seed imbibition, and then decline rapidly as germination proceeds. In situ GUS staining revealed that RGL2 expression in imbibed seeds is restricted to elongating regions of pre-emergent and recently emerged radicles. These observations indicate that RGL2 is a negative regulator of GA responses that acts specifically to control seed germination rather than stem elongation. Furthermore, as RGL2 expression is imbibition inducible, RGL2 may function as an integrator of environmental and endogenous cues to control seed germination.

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Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL pengjr{at}ima.org.sg; FAX 65-8727007.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.969002.

    • Received December 11, 2001.
    • Accepted January 11, 2002.
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