Zachgo S; Silva E de A et al 1995
- Authors:Zachgo S; Silva E de A; Motte P; Trobner W; Saedler H; Schwarz-Sommer Z
- Title: Functional analysis of the Antirrhinum floral homeotic
DEFICIENS gene in vivo and in vitro by using a temperature-sensitive
mutant.
- Location: Development 1995 Sep;121(9):2861-75
- Abstract: Flowers of the temperature-sensitive DEFICIENS (DEF) mutant, def-101,
display sepaloid petals and carpelloid stamens when grown at 26 degrees
C, the non-permissive temperature. In contrast, when cultivated under
permissive conditions at 15 degrees C, the morphology of def-101 flowers
resembles that of the wild type. Temperature shift experiments during
early and late phases of flower development revealed that second and
third whorl organ development is differentially sensitive to changes in
DEF expression. In addition, early DEF expression seems to control the
spatially correct initiation of fourth whorl organ development. Reduction
of the def-101 gene dosage differentially affects organogenesis in
adjacent whorls: at the lower temperature development of petals in the
second whorl and initiation of carpels in the centre of the flower is not
affected while third whorl organogenesis follows the mutant (carpelloid)
pattern. The possible contribution of accessory factors to organ-specific
DEF functions is discussed. In situ analyses of mRNA and protein
expression patterns during def-101 flower development at 15 degrees C and
at 26 degrees C support previously proposed combinatorial regulatory
interactions between the MADS-box proteins DEF and GLOBOSA (GLO), and
provide evidence that the autoregulatory control of DEF and GLO
expression by the DEF/GLO heterodimer starts after initiation of all
organ primordia. Immunolocalisation revealed that both proteins are
located in the nucleus. Interestingly, higher growth temperature affects
the stability of both the DEF-101 and GLO proteins in vivo. In vitro DNA
binding studies suggest that the temperature sensitivity of the def-101
mutant is due to an altered heterodimerisation/DNA-binding capability of
the DEF-101 protein, conditioned by the deletion of one amino acid within
the K-box, a protein region thought to be involved in protein-protein
interaction. In addition, we introduce a mutant allele of GLO,
glo-confusa, where insertion of one amino acid impairs the hydrophobic
carboxy-terminal region of the MADS-box, but which confers no strong
phenotypic changes to the flower. The strong mutant phenotype of flowers
of def-101/glo-conf double mutants when grown in the cold represents
genetic evidence for heterodimerisation between DEF and GLO in vivo. The
potential to dissect structural and functional domains of MADS-box
transcription factors is discussed.
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