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The Arabidopsis Floral Repressor BFT Delays Flowering by Competing with FT for FD Binding under High Salinity

Authors
Ryu, Jae YongLee, Hyo-JunSeo, Pil JoonJung, Jae-HoonAhn, Ji HoonPark, Chung-Mo
Issue Date
2월-2014
Publisher
CELL PRESS
Keywords
Arabidopsis; BFT; FD; flowering time; FT; salt stress
Citation
MOLECULAR PLANT, v.7, no.2, pp.377 - 387
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MOLECULAR PLANT
Volume
7
Number
2
Start Page
377
End Page
387
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/99427
DOI
10.1093/mp/sst114
ISSN
1674-2052
Abstract
Soil salinity is one of the most serious agricultural problems that significantly reduce crop yields in the arid and semi-arid regions. It influences various phases of plant growth and developmental processes, such as seed germination, leaf and stem growth, and reproductive propagation. Salt stress delays the onset of flowering in many plant species. We have previously reported that the Arabidopsis BROTHER OF FT AND TFL1 (BFT) acts as a floral repressor under salt stress. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the BFT function in the salt regulation of flowering induction is unknown. In this work, we found that BFT delays flowering under high salinity by competing with FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) for binding to the FD transcription factor. The flowering time of FD-deficient fd-2 mutant was insensitive to high salinity. BFT interacts with FD in the nucleus via the C-terminal domain of FD, which is also required for the interaction of FD with FT, and interferes with the FT-FD interaction. These observations indicate that BFT constitutes a distinct salt stress signaling pathway that modulates the function of the FT-FD module and possibly provides an adaptation strategy that fine-tunes photoperiodic flowering under high salinity.
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