4.6 Article

Analysis of PEBP Genes in Saffron Identifies a Flowering Locus T Homologue Involved in Flowering Regulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 2486-2505

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00344-022-10721-2

Keywords

Flowering; Saffron; PEBP; Geophyte; Vegetative growth

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This study isolated a group of genes in saffron and found that they play an important regulatory role in the process of flowering.
Flowering determines the yield of saffron, whereas synchronized sprouting determines plant fitness; thus, their regulation is of utmost importance. In saffron, corm sprouting is marked with the emergence of flowers and leaves simultaneously. PEBP genes have a conserved role in regulating flowering and vegetative growth in plants, but their role in saffron is confined due to the non-availability of genomic resources. In the present study, we isolated their homologues in saffron and examined their alleged role in promoting flowering. Here we report that at least 6 FTs (FLOWERING LOCUS T), 2 TFL1s (TERMINAL FLOWER 1), and 2 MFTs (MOTHER OF FT AND TFL1) genes are present in saffron. The sequence analysis suggests they possess a conserved structural genetic organization with other plant species gene members. Interestingly, two FT genes (CsatFT4 and CsatFT6) showed the presence of characteristic amino acids of TFL-like genes but were aligned in FT genes clade. Phylogenetic analysis divided them into FT-like, TFL1-like, and MFT-like clades. The expression of identified genes varied among different tissues. The spatial and temporal expressions during sprouting suggest that they might have different functions. Tissue and organ-specific expression profiling suggest that CsatFT3 might act locally in apical buds to promote flowering, while CsatFT1 and 2 are involved in promoting vegetative growth. Antagonistically, CsatTFL1-1 and CsatTFL1-2 might regulate vegetative growth and flowering, respectively. Additionally, comparative expression profiling between flowering competent (big) vs non-competent (small) corms affirm the specific role of CsatFT3 as a plausible flowering regulator.

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