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Journal article

EMF1, a novel protein involved in the control of shoot architecture and flowering in Arabidopsis

In Plant Cell 2001, Volume 13, Issue 8, pp. 1865-1875
From

Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark

Shoot architecture and flowering time in angiosperms depend on the balanced expression of a large number of flowering time and flower meristem identity genes. Loss-of-function mutations in the Arabidopsis EMBRYONIC FLOWER (EMF) genes cause Arabidopsis to eliminate rosette shoot growth and transform the apical meristem from indeterminate to determinate growth by producing a single terminal flower on all nodes.

We have identified the EMF1 gene by positional cloning. The deduced polypeptide has no homology with any protein of known function except a putative protein in the rice genome with which EMF1 shares common motifs that include nuclear localization signals, P-loop, and LXXLL elements. Alteration of EMF1 expression in transgenic plants caused progressive changes in flowering time, shoot determinacy, and inflorescence architecture.

EMF1 and its related sequence may belong to a new class of proteins that function as transcriptional regulators of phase transition during shoot development.

Language: English
Publisher: American Society of Plant Biologists
Year: 2001
Pages: 1865-1875
ISSN: 1532298x and 10404651
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.2307/3871324

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