Plant J.; co-auth. group Fankhauser

Plant J. 2011 Feb;65(3):441-52. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2010.04434.x. Epub 2010 Dec 15.

Light receptor action is critical for maintaining plant biomass at warm ambient temperatures.

Foreman J, Johansson H, Hornitschek P, Josse EM, Fankhauser C, Halliday KJ.

Department of Biological Sciences, CH Waddington Building, Kings Buildings, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Abstract

The ability to withstand environmental temperature variation is essential for plant survival. Former studies in Arabidopsis revealed that light signalling pathways had a potentially unique role in shielding plant growth and development from seasonal and daily fluctuations in temperature. In this paper we describe the molecular circuitry through which the light receptors cry1 and phyB buffer the impact of warm ambient temperatures. We show that the light signalling component HFR1 acts to minimise the potentially devastating effects of elevated temperature on plant physiology. Light is known to stabilise levels of HFR1 protein by suppressing proteasome-mediated destruction of HFR1. We demonstrate that light-dependent accumulation and activity of HFR1 are highly temperature dependent. The increased potency of HFR1 at warmer temperatures provides an important restraint on PIF4 that drives elongation growth. We show that warm ambient temperatures promote the accumulation of phosphorylated PIF4. However, repression of PIF4 activity by phyB and cry1 (via HFR1) is critical for controlling growth and maintaining physiology as temperatures rise. Loss of this light-mediated restraint has severe consequences for adult plants which have greatly reduced biomass.

© 2010 The Authors. The Plant Journal © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

PMID: 21265897

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