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Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2010

An Antagonistic Pair of FT Homologs Mediates the Control of Flowering Time in Sugar Beet

Pin, Pierre A.; Benlloch, Reyes; Bonnet, Dominique; Wremerth-Weich, Elisabeth; Kraft, Thomas; Gielen, Jan J. L.; Nilsson, Ove

Abstract

Cultivated beets (Beta vulgaris ssp. vulgaris) are unable to form reproductive shoots during the first year of their life cycle. Flowering only occurs if plants get vernalized, that is, pass through the winter, and are subsequently exposed to an increasing day length (photoperiod) in spring. Here, we show that the regulation of flowering time in beets is controlled by the interplay of two paralogs of the FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) gene in Arabidopsis that have evolved antagonistic functions. BvFT2 is functionally conserved with FT and essential for flowering. In contrast, BvFT1 represses flowering and its down-regulation is crucial for the vernalization response in beets. These data suggest that the beet has evolved a different strategy relative to Arabidopsis and cereals to regulate vernalization.

Published in

Science
2010, Volume: 330, number: 6009, pages: 1397-1400