Phytochrome mediates the external light signal to repress FT orthologs in photoperiodic flowering of rice

  1. Takeshi Izawa1,4,6,
  2. Tetsuo Oikawa1,5,
  3. Nobuko Sugiyama1,
  4. Takatoshi Tanisaka2,
  5. Masahiro Yano3, and
  6. Ko Shimamoto1
  1. 1Laboratory of Plant Molecular Genetics, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Ikoma, Nara 630-0101, Japan; 2Laboratory of Plant Breeding, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan; 3Laboratory of Applied Plant Genomics, National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8602, Japan

Abstract

Phytochromes confer the photoperiodic control of flowering in rice (Oryza sativa), a short-day plant. To better understand the molecular mechanisms of day-length recognition, we examined the interaction between phytochrome signals and circadian clocks in photoperiodic-flowering mutants of rice. Monitoring behaviors of circadian clocks revealed that phase setting of circadian clocks is not affected either under short-day (SD) or under long-day (LD) conditions in a phytochrome-deficient mutant that shows an early-flowering phenotype with no photoperiodic response. Non-24-hr-light/dark-cycle experiments revealed that a rice counterpart gene of Arabidopsis CONSTANS (CO), named PHOTOPERIOD SENSITIVITY 1(Heading date 1) [SE1 (Hd1)], functions as an output of circadian clocks. In addition, the phytochrome deficiency does not affect the diurnal mRNA expression of SE1 upon floral transition. Downstream floral switch genes were further identified with rice orthologs of Arabidopsis FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT). Our RT-PCR data indicate that phytochrome signals repress mRNA expression of FT orthologs, whereas SE1 can function to promote and suppress mRNA expression of the FT orthologs under SD and LD, respectively. This SE1 transcriptional activity may be posttranscriptionally regulated and may depend on the coincidence with Pfr phytochromes. We propose a model to explain how a short-day plant recognizes the day length in photoperiodic flowering.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Present addresses: 4National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, 2-1-2 Kannondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8602, Japan; 5Hokuriku National Agricultural Experiment Station, 1-2-1 Inada, Joetsu, Niigata 943-0193, Japan.

  • 6 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL tizawa{at}nias.affrc.go.jp; FAX 81-298-38-7468.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.999202.

    • Received April 15, 2002.
    • Accepted June 11, 2002.
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