PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Gibberellin and auxin influence the diurnal transcription pattern of photoreceptor genes via CRY1a in tomato.

  • Paolo Facella,
  • Loretta Daddiego,
  • Giovanni Giuliano,
  • Gaetano Perrotta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. e30121

Abstract

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BackgroundPlant photoreceptors, phytochromes and cryptochromes, regulate many aspects of development and growth, such as seed germination, stem elongation, seedling de-etiolation, cotyledon opening, flower induction and circadian rhythms. There are several pieces of evidence of interaction between photoreceptors and phyto-hormones in all of these physiological processes, but little is known about molecular and genetic mechanisms underlying hormone-photoreceptor crosstalk.Methodology/principal findingsIn this work, we investigated the molecular effects of exogenous phyto-hormones to photoreceptor gene transcripts of tomato wt, as well as transgenic and mutant lines with altered cryptochromes, by monitoring day/night transcript oscillations. GA and auxin alter the diurnal expression level of different photoreceptor genes in tomato, especially in mutants that lack a working form of cryptochrome 1a: in those mutants the expression of some (IAA) or most (GA) photoreceptor genes is down regulated by these hormones.Conclusions/significanceOur results highlight the presence of molecular relationships among cryptochrome 1a protein, hormones, and photoreceptors' gene expression in tomato, suggesting that manipulation of cryptochromes could represent a good strategy to understand in greater depth the role of phyto-hormones in the plant photoperceptive mechanism.