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The survival and adaptation of angiosperms depends on the proper timing of flowering. The weedy species Chenopodium ficifolium serves as a useful diploid model for comparing the transition to flowering with the important tetraploid crop Chenopodium quinoa due to the close phylogenetic relationship. The detailed transcriptomic and hormonomic study of the floral induction was performed in the short-day accession C. ficifolium 459. The plants grew more rapidly under long days but flowered later than under short days. The high levels of abscisic, jasmonic, and salicylic acids at long days were accompanied by the elevated expression of the genes responding to oxidative stress. The increased concentrations of stress-related phytohormones neither inhibited the plant growth nor accelerated flowering in C. ficifolium 459 at long photoperiods. Enhanced content of cytokinins and the stimulation of cytokinin and gibberellic acid signaling pathways under short days may indicate the possible participation of these phytohormones in floral initiation. The accumulation of auxin metabolites suggests the presence of a dynamic regulatory network in C. ficifolium 459.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2022.111279 | DOI Listing |
Plant Signal Behav
December 2025
Institute of Experimental Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic.
is a close diploid relative of the tetraploid crop . Owing to its reproducible germination and seedling development, it becomes a promising model for studying floral induction, providing a basis for the comparison with . Two genotypes differ in photoperiodic requirement: 283 accelerates flowering under long days, whereas 459 flowers earlier under short days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
August 2022
Institute of Experimental Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Rozvojová 263, 16502 Prague, Czech Republic.
The transition from vegetative growth to reproduction is the essential commitment in plant life. It is triggered by environmental cues (day length, temperature, nutrients) and regulated by the very complex signaling gene network and by phytohormones. The control of flowering is well understood in and in some crops, much less is known about the other angiosperms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Sci
July 2022
Institute of Experimental Botany, Czech Academy of Sciences, Rozvojová 263, 16502 Prague, Czech Republic. Electronic address:
The survival and adaptation of angiosperms depends on the proper timing of flowering. The weedy species Chenopodium ficifolium serves as a useful diploid model for comparing the transition to flowering with the important tetraploid crop Chenopodium quinoa due to the close phylogenetic relationship. The detailed transcriptomic and hormonomic study of the floral induction was performed in the short-day accession C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF