Perianth development is specifically disrupted in mutants of the PETAL LOSS (PTL) gene, particularly petal initiation and orientation. We have cloned PTL and show that it encodes a plant-specific trihelix transcription factor, one of a family previously known only as regulators of light-controlled genes. PTL transcripts were detected in the early-developing flower, in four zones between the initiating sepals and in their developing margins. Strong misexpression of PTL in a range of tissues universally results in inhibition of growth, indicating that its normal role is to suppress growth between initiating sepals, ensuring that they remain separate. Consistent with this, sepals are sometimes fused in ptl single mutants, but much more frequently in double mutants with either of the organ boundary genes cup-shaped cotyledon1 or 2. Expression of PTL within the newly arising sepals is apparently prevented by the PINOID auxin-response gene. Surprisingly, PTL expression could not be detected in petals during the early stages of their development, so petal defects associated with PTLloss of function may be indirect, perhaps involving disruption to signalling processes caused by overgrowth in the region. PTL-driven reporter gene expression was also detected at later stages in the margins of expanding sepals, petals and stamens, and in the leaf margins; thus, PTL may redundantly dampen lateral outgrowth of these organs, helping define their final shape.
PETAL LOSS, a trihelix transcription factor gene, regulates perianth architecture in the Arabidopsis flower
Present address: Research School of Biological Sciences, ANU, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Present address: Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, 30 Medical Drive,Singapore 117609, Republic of Singapore
Present address: Plant Science Center, RIKEN, Yokohama, Kanagawa 230-0045,Japan
Philip B. Brewer, Paul A. Howles, Kristen Dorian, Megan E. Griffith, Tetsuya Ishida, Ruth N. Kaplan-Levy, Aydin Kilinc, David R. Smyth; PETAL LOSS, a trihelix transcription factor gene, regulates perianth architecture in the Arabidopsis flower. Development 15 August 2004; 131 (16): 4035–4045. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.01279
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