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Plant Physiol, May 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 5-6
THE HOT AND THE CLASSIC
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The Vernalization Response of Arabidopsis |
Vernalization refers to the
acceleration of flowering that occurs in many plant species following
the extended exposure of their imbibed seeds or young seedlings or buds
to extended periods of cold. Vernalization is not all-or-none, but a
slow, quantitative process in which increasing periods of cold cause
progressively earlier flowering until a saturation point is reached.
Plants that are vernalized as seeds or young seedlings do not flower immediately upon being raised to higher temperatures, but often weeks
later. There is, therefore, a clear temporal separation between the
perception of cold and the switch from vegetative to reproductive
growth. The perception of and response to cold is localized in the
meristematic cells of embryos, growing points, and buds. The changes
induced in meristems by vernalization are conserved through many
generations of cell division even at temperatures much higher than
those required for the cold induction of flowering. In some species,
this "memory" of vernalization can be maintained for up to 330 d (Lang, 1965 ). Vernalization is required in each generation for winter
annuals and biennials and each year for perennials. Thus, meiosis
appears to reset the requirement for vernalization.
There is tremendous natural variation between Arabidopsis ecotypes in
the extent to which their time to flowering is shortened by
vernalization. For example, a standard vernalization treatment decreased the time to floral initiation from 186 d to 49 d in a naturally late-flowering Arabidopsis accession from North Carolina, but only from 54 d to 52 d in an early-flowering accession
from Köln, Germany (Nordborg and Bergelson, 1999 ). Both
Arabidopsis ecotypes and vernalization mutants have been enormously
valuable in allowing biologists to address the fundamental question of how vernalization works.
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A Role for Gibberellin? |
Arabidopsis grows as an inconspicuous rosette until the onset of
floral initiation, whereupon bolting occurs. Gibberellic acid (GA) is
the major factor underlying bolting. Vernalization not only increases
GA biosynthesis in the vegetative rosette but also elevates the GA
sensitivity of the shoot (Oka et al., 2001 ).
Although GA has been found to accelerate the time to flowering in
non-vernalized Arabidopsis grown under short days (Wilson et al.,
1992 ), the promotion of flowering by GA does not mimic vernalization
precisely. For example, the time to flowering in late-flowering
Arabidopsis mutants is reduced similarly by GA regardless of whether
they are vernalization-sensitive (Chandler and Dean, 1994 ).
Moreover, an Arabidopsis mutant (ga 1-3) that is
severely defective in GA synthesis responds normally to vernalization (Michaels and Amasino, 1999a ). Thus, although GA may promote flowering generally, it cannot substitute for vernalization, and it does not
appear to have a direct role in the vernalization response in Arabidopsis.
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FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) and FRIGIDA (FRI) |
The genes FLC and FRI play central
roles in vernalization in Arabidopsis. In naturally occurring
late-flowering ecotypes, FRI acts to increase, and
vernalization to reduce, FLC levels (Michaels and
Amasino, 1999b ; Sheldon et al., 1999 ; Johanson et al., 2000 ). Allelic
variation at the FRI locus is a major determinant of natural variation
in flowering time. Dominant alleles of FRI confer late flowering, which
is reversed to earliness by vernalization. Research has shown that
loss-of-function mutations at FRI have provided the
basis for the evolution of many early-flowering Arabidopsis ecotypes
from ancestral late-flowering types (Johanson et al., 2000 ).
FLC also plays a major role in vernalization.
An early flowering phenotype results when FLC, which
encodes for a novel MADS domain protein, is rendered dysfunctional by
mutation (Michaels and Amasino, 1999b ). FLC acts as a strong floral
repressor by negatively regulating the genes that promote the
transition to flowering. Vernalization promotes flowering by reducing
FLC mRNA levels. The extent of the reduction is
proportional to the duration of vernalization and is closely correlated
with flowering time. Michaels and Amasino (2000) have proposed a
"rheostat model" of flowering time, in which increasing levels of
FLC are associated with the conversion of a species or ecotype from an
annual growth habit to a biennial one.
The reduction in FLC transcript levels by vernalization
is mitotically stable. FLC activity is restored in each new generation, as is the requirement for an exposure to cold for the acceleration of
flowering. The level of FLC transcript determines the
extent of the vernalization response in the promotion of
flowering, and there is a quantitative relationship between the
duration of cold treatment and the extent of down-regulation of
FLC activity. A surprising discovery, therefore, was
that the complete loss of FLC function does not eliminate the effect of
vernalization. Thus, vernalization is able to promote flowering
via FLC-dependent and FLC-independent mechanisms (Michaels and
Amasino, 2001 ).
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Similarities to Epigenesis |
Mutants have been isolated that reduce the vernalization
responsiveness of late-flowering Arabidopsis mutants (Chandler et al.,
1996 ). Some of these vernalization mutants (vrn) are
unable to reduce FLC mRNA in response to cold,
suggesting that they encode regulators of FLC expression
(Sheldon et al., 2000 ). Gendall et al. (2001) have recently
shown that one of the genes (VRN2) encodes a
nuclear-localized Zn finger protein that is a structural homolog of
Suppressor of zeste 12, a Polycomb group
(PcG) gene of enormous importance in fruit fly
(Drosophila melanogaster) development. In fruit
fly, PcG proteins generally act by remodeling chromatin structure
and mediating the silencing of homeotic genes. VRN2 does not appear to
be required for the vernalization-induced decrease in
FLC mRNA, but it is essential for the stable repression
of FLC later in development (Gendall et al.,
2001 ).
The maintenance of vernalization through multiple cell
divisions is reminiscent of epigenetic phenomena. Changes in epigenetic states are often correlated with developmentally imposed alterations in
genomic DNA methylation and local chromatin structure (Meyer, 2000 ;
Habu et al., 2001 ). There is some evidence that DNA methylation may
play a role in preventing early flowering in Arabidopsis ecotypes (Burn
et al., 1993 ). Much like vernalized plants, Arabidopsis seedlings that
have been treated with the demethylating compound 5-azacytidine flower
more quickly. Late-flowering mutants that are insensitive to
vernalization do not respond to 5-azacytidine treatments. Burn et al.
(1993) found that Arabidopsis plants, either vernalized or
5-azacytidine-treated, had reduced levels of 5-methylcytosine in their
DNA compared with non-vernalized plants. Moreover, normal flowering
time was found to be reset in the progeny of plants induced to flower
early with 5-azacytidine, paralleling the lack of inheritance of the
vernalized condition. These findings led Burn et al. (1993) to propose
that vernalization, through general demethylating effects, may release
the block to flowering initiation, thereby allowing the plant to flower
early. In support of this idea, Finnegan et al. (1998) found that
Arabidopsis plants that had reduced levels of DNA methylation because
of their transformation by a methyltransferase (MET1)
antisense gene flowered earlier than untransformed control plants, and
without the need for a cold treatment. Moreover, the promotion of
flowering was directly proportional to the decrease in methylation
observed in the MET1 antisense lines. Not all of the
results of Finnegan et al. (1998) , however, were consistent with
the hypothesis that vernalization stems from a general demethylation of
DNA. First, although growth at vernalizing temperatures was associated
with some reduction of DNA methylation, this demethylation was
transient and normal methylation levels were restored when the
seedlings were transferred to warm temperatures. Second, unlike the
case with vernalization, the early-flowering phenotype was inherited in
sexual progeny, even when the antisense transgene was lost by segregation.
In summary, while vernalization continues to defy full explanation,
plant scientists have, in this first decade of the Arabidopsis revolution, made enormous strides in identifying some of the key players in the vernalization process.
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FOOTNOTES |
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.900032.
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Peter V. Minorsky
Department of Natural Sciences Mercy College Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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