4.7 Article

The Arabidopsis mutant, fy-1, has an ABA-insensitive germination phenotype

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 63, Issue 7, Pages 2693-2703

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/err452

Keywords

ABA; ABI5; dormancy; flowering; FY; germination

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [OGP4689, CRDPJ 335483-05]
  2. Performance Plants, Inc.
  3. Province of Manitoba (Science, Technology, Energy and Mines)

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Arabidopsis FY, a homologue of the yeast RNA 3' processing factor Pfs2p, regulates the autonomous floral transition pathway through its interaction with FCA, an RNA binding protein. It is demonstrated here that FY also influences seed dormancy. Freshly-harvested seed of the Arabidopsis fy-1 mutant germinated readily in the absence of stratification or after-ripening. Furthermore, the fy-1 mutant showed less ABA sensitivity compared with the wild type, Ler, under identical conditions. Freshly-harvested seed of fy-1 had significantly higher ABA levels than Ler, even though Ler was dormant and fy-1 germinated readily. The PPLPP domains of FY, which are required for flowering control, were not essential for the ABA-influenced repression of germination. FLC expression analysis in seeds of different genotypes suggested that the effect of FY on dormancy may not be elicited through FLC. No significant differences in CYP707A1, CYP707A2, NCED9, ABI3, and ABI4 were observed between freshly-harvested Ler and fy-1 imbibed for 48 h. GA3ox1 and GA3ox2 rapidly increased over the 48 h imbibition period for fy-1, with no significant increases in these transcripts for Ler. ABI5 levels were significantly lower in fy-1 over the 48 h imbibition period. The results suggest that FY is involved in the development of dormancy and ABA sensitivity in Arabidopsis seed.

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