Crosstalk in the darkness: bulb vernalization activates meristem transition via circadian rhythm and photoperiodic pathway.
Tomer E Ben MichaelAdi FaigenboimEinat Shemesh-MayerItzhak ForerChen GershbergHadass ShafranHaim D RabinowitchRina Kamenetsky-GoldsteinPublished in: BMC plant biology (2020)
Low temperatures stimulate a large cascades of molecular mechanisms in garlic, and a variety of flowering pathways operate together for the benefit of meristem transition, annual life cycle and viable reproduction results.The circadian clock appears to play a central role in the transition of the meristem from vegetative to reproductive stage in bulbous plant, serving as integrator of the low-temperature signals and the expression of the genes associated with vernalization, photoperiod and meristem transition. The reserved photoperiodic pathway is integrated at an upstream point, possibly by the same receptors. Therefore, in bulb, low temperatures stimulate cascades of developmental mechanisms, and several genetic flowering pathways intermix to achieve successful sexual and vegetative reproduction.