AI Article Synopsis

  • Long exposures to nonfreezing cold temperatures help winter wheat and barley flower faster and become more freezing-tolerant, but reproductive development reduces freezing tolerance.
  • The study used mvp mutant wheat plants to examine the role of the VRN-1 gene, finding that plants without functional VRN-1 do not flower and have better freezing tolerance compared to those that do.
  • Results suggest that VRN-1 activates a regulatory process that influences cold acclimation and that genetic variations in VRN-1 affect freezing tolerance, potentially linking it to previously identified quantitative trait loci for freezing resistance.

Article Abstract

In winter wheat (Triticum spp.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) varieties, long exposures to nonfreezing cold temperatures accelerate flowering time (vernalization) and improve freezing tolerance (cold acclimation). However, when plants initiate their reproductive development, freezing tolerance decreases, suggesting a connection between the two processes. To better understand this connection, we used two diploid wheat (Triticum monococcum) mutants, maintained vegetative phase (mvp), that carry deletions encompassing VRN-1, the major vernalization gene in temperate cereals. Homozygous mvp/mvp plants never flower, whereas plants carrying at least one functional VRN-1 copy (Mvp/-) exhibit normal flowering and high transcript levels of VRN-1 under long days. The Mvp/- plants showed reduced freezing tolerance and reduced transcript levels of several cold-induced C-REPEAT BINDING FACTOR transcription factors and COLD REGULATED genes (COR) relative to the mvp/mvp plants. Diploid wheat accessions with mutations in the VRN-1 promoter, resulting in high transcript levels under both long and short days, showed a significant down-regulation of COR14b under long days but not under short days. Taken together, these studies suggest that VRN-1 is required for the initiation of the regulatory cascade that down-regulates the cold acclimation pathway but that additional genes regulated by long days are required for the down-regulation of the COR genes. In addition, our results show that allelic variation in VRN-1 is sufficient to determine differences in freezing tolerance, suggesting that quantitative trait loci for freezing tolerance previously mapped on this chromosome region are likely a pleiotropic effect of VRN-1 rather than the effect of a separate closely linked locus (FROST RESISTANCE-1), as proposed in early freezing tolerance studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2923912PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.110.159079DOI Listing

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