Studies of natural variation have revealed that the winter-annual habit of many accessions of Arabidopsis is conferred by two genes, FRIGIDA (FRI) and FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC),whose activities impose a vernalization requirement. To better understand the mechanism underlying the winter-annual habit, a genetic screen was performed to identify mutants that suppress the late-flowering behavior of a non-vernalized winter-annual strain. We have identified a locus, FRIGIDA-ESSENTIAL 1 (FES1), which, like FRI, is specifically required for the upregulation of FLC expression. FES1 is predicted to encode a protein with a CCCH zinc finger, but the predicted sequence does not otherwise share significant similarity with other known proteins. fes1 is a complete suppressor of FRI-mediated delayed flowering, but has little effect on the late-flowering phenotype of autonomous-pathway mutants. Thus, FES1activity is required for the FRI-mediated winter-annual habit, but not for the similar phenotype resulting from autonomous-pathway mutations. Epistasis analysis between FES1, FRI and another specific suppressor of FRI-containing lines, FRIGIDA-LIKE 1(FRL1), indicates that these genes do not function in a linear pathway, but instead act cooperatively to promote the expression of FLC.
FRIGIDA-ESSENTIAL 1 interacts genetically with FRIGIDAand FRIGIDA-LIKE 1 to promote the winter-annual habit of Arabidopsis thaliana Available to Purchase
Present address: Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA
Robert J. Schmitz, Lewis Hong, Scott Michaels, Richard M. Amasino; FRIGIDA-ESSENTIAL 1 interacts genetically with FRIGIDAand FRIGIDA-LIKE 1 to promote the winter-annual habit of Arabidopsis thaliana. Development 15 December 2005; 132 (24): 5471–5478. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.02170
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