Florigen-producing cells express FPF1-LIKE PROTEIN 1 that accelerates flowering and stem growth in long days with sunlight red/far-red ratio in Arabidopsis .

Hiroshi TakagiNayoung LeeAndrew K HemptonSavita PurusuwashiMichitaka NotaguchiKota YamauchiKazumasa ShiraiYaichi KawakatsuSusumu UeharaWilliam G AlbersBenjamin L R DowningShogo ItoTakamasa SuzukiTakakazu MatsuuraIzumi C MoriNobutaka MitsudaDaisuke KuriharaTomonao MatsushitaYoung Hun SongYoshikatsu SatoMika NomotoYasuomi TadaKousuke HanadaJosh T CuperusChristine QueitschTakato Imaizumi
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Seasonal changes in spring induce flowering by expressing the florigen, FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT), in Arabidopsis . FT is expressed in unique phloem companion cells with unknown characteristics. The question of which genes are co-expressed with FT and whether they have roles in flowering remains elusive. Through tissue-specific translatome analysis, we discovered that under long-day conditions with the natural sunlight red/far-red ratio, the FT -producing cells express a gene encoding FPF1-LIKE PROTEIN 1 (FLP1). The master FT regulator, CONSTANS (CO), controls FLP1 expression, suggesting FLP1 's involvement in the photoperiod pathway. FLP1 promotes early flowering independently of FT , is active in the shoot apical meristem, and induces the expression of SEPALLATA 3 ( SEP3 ), a key E-class homeotic gene. Unlike FT, FLP1 facilitates inflorescence stem elongation. Our cumulative evidence indicates that FLP1 may act as a mobile signal. Thus, FLP1 orchestrates floral initiation together with FT and promotes inflorescence stem elongation during reproductive transitions.