Publications by authors named "J Gendron"

Photoperiod is an environmental signal that varies predictably across the year. Therefore, the duration of sunlight available for photosynthesis and in turn the ability of plants to accumulate carbon resources also fluctuates across the year. To adapt to these variations in photoperiod, the metabolic daylength measurement (MDLM) system measures the photosynthetic period rather than the absolute photoperiod, translating it into seasonal gene expression changes linked to photoperiodic growth.

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The circadian clock is an endogenous oscillator, and its importance lies in its ability to impart rhythmicity on downstream biological processes, or outputs. Our knowledge of output regulation, however, is often limited to an understanding of transcriptional connections between the clock and outputs. For instance, the clock is linked to plant growth through the gating of photoreceptors via rhythmic transcription of the nodal growth regulators, PHYTOCHROME-INTERACTING FACTORs (PIFs), but the clock's role in PIF protein stability is less clear.

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Plants measure daylength (photoperiod) to regulate seasonal growth and flowering. Photoperiodic flowering has been well studied, but less is known about photoperiodic growth. By using a mutant with defects in photoperiodic growth, we identified a seasonal growth regulation pathway that functions in long days in parallel to the canonical long-day photoperiod flowering mechanism.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hypocotyl elongation is influenced by various signals, primarily in dark or warm conditions, with emphasis on protein degradation mechanisms that are still not well-understood.
  • A study on Arabidopsis seedlings at different temperatures showed a decrease in various proteins over time, indicating that factors like transcription, translation, and protein degradation play a role.
  • The research identified the LRR F-box protein SLOMO as a negative regulator of hypocotyl growth, with its activity affecting the degradation of growth regulators like DWF1 through ubiquitin-mediated processes, especially under warm temperature conditions.
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