4.4 Article

Initiation of axillary and floral meristems in Arabidopsis

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 218, Issue 2, Pages 341-353

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1006/dbio.1999.9572

Keywords

meristem; bud; SHOOT MERISTEMLESS; Arabidopsis; AINTEGUMENTA

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Shoot development is reiterative: shoot apical meristems (SAMs) give rise to branches made of repeating leaf and stem units with new SAMs in turn formed in the axils of the leaves. Thus, new axes of growth are established on preexisting axes. Here we describe the formation of axillary meristems and floral meristems in Arabidopsis by monitoring the expression of the SHOOT MERISTEMLESS and AINTEGUMENTA genes. Expression of these genes is associated with SAMs and organ primordia, respectively. Four stages of axillary meristem development and previously undefined substages of floral meristem development are described. We find parallels between the development of axillary meristems and the development of floral meristems. Although Arabidopsis hewers develop in the apparent absence of a subtending leaf, the expression patterns of AINTEGUMENTA and SHOOT MERISTEMLESS RNAs during newer development suggest the presence of a highly reduced, cryptic leaf subtending the newer in Arabidopsis. We hypothesize that the STM-negative region that develops on the hanks of the inflorescence meristem is a bract primordium and that the floral meristem proper develops in the axil of this bract primordium. The bract primordium, although initially specified, becomes repressed in its growth, (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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