Environmental stress and flowering time: the photoperiodic connection

Plant Signaling & Behavior
Matteo RiboniLucio Conti

Abstract

Plants maximize their chances to survive adversities by reprogramming their development according to environmental conditions. Adaptive variations in the timing to flowering reflect the need for plants to set seeds under the most favorable conditions. A complex network of genetic pathways allows plants to detect and integrate external (e.g., photoperiod and temperature) and/or internal (e.g., age) information to initiate the floral transition. Furthermore different types of environmental stresses play an important role in the floral transition. The emerging picture is that stress conditions often affect flowering through modulation of the photoperiodic pathway. In this review we will discuss different modes of cross talk between stress signaling and photoperiodic flowering, highlighting the central role of the florigen genes in this process.

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Citations

Oct 3, 2015·Journal of Experimental Botany·Kemal Kazan, Rebecca Lyons
Jul 7, 2016·Journal of Experimental Botany·Kiyotoshi Takeno
Jan 24, 2018·Plant & Cell Physiology·Kai ShuWenyu Yang
Nov 9, 2017·Frontiers in Plant Science·Guijun YanChunji Liu
Dec 21, 2018·International Journal of Radiation Biology·Maryna V KryvokhyzhaNamik M Rashydov
Feb 20, 2020·Journal of Experimental Botany·Xinwei MaHong Ma
Dec 7, 2016·Journal of Biological Rhythms·Kathleen GreenhamC Robertson McClung
Oct 2, 2020·Genes·Claudio BrandoliJulia Weiss
Feb 12, 2021·Plant Signaling & Behavior·Leandro Nuñez-MuñozBeatriz Xoconostle-Cázares

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
environmental stress

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