Central America (1), natural genetic variations in flowering time enabled early Native Americans to select maize adapted to a range of latitudes and lengths of growing seasons, including the very short summer season typical of the eastern Canadian region of Quebec. Under such conditions, early flowering allows seed to mature before the onset of frost. Flowering time is also a key trait of improved drought tolerance. Indeed, it has been shown that a single day of drought during flowering can decrease yield by as much as 8% (2). One way to address such losses is to develop and grow cultivars characterized by a short cycle and able to flower before predictable drought episodes.The genetic variability available for maize breeding is essentially quantitative; i.e., it involves allelic variation at different quantitative trait loci (QTLs), which are influenced by environmental effects. Although a large body of mapping information on QTLs is available for flowering time (3), relatively little is known about the molecular basis of QTLs, with only one gene, Dwarf8, correlated thus far with quantitative effects (4, 5). Furthermore, a few mutants for flowering time have been described (6, 7), two of which, id1 (8) and dlf1 (9), have been cloned. Our results (i) show that the allelic variation responsible for the major flowering-time QTL, Vegetative to generative transition 1 (Vgt1) (10, 11) on chromosome 8, is confined to an Ϸ2-kb intergenic region upstream of an Ap2-like flowering-time gene, (ii) identify maize-sorghum-rice evolutionarily conserved noncoding sequences (CNSs) within Vgt1, and (iii) support a cisacting transcription-regulatory role for Vgt1. ResultsPositional Cloning of Vgt1. Previous work (12) mapped Vgt1 to a 1.3-cM region (Fig. 1A) on bin 8.05, based on a mapping population derived from the cross N28 ϫ C22-4. The strain C22-4 is nearly isogenic to N28 and carries the early Vgt1 allele in an Ϸ7-cM introgression originating from the early maize variety Gaspé Flint. By using standard positional cloning, Vgt1 was confined to an Ϸ2-kb region (Fig. 1 B-D). Sequence annotation of the original BAC clone and the corresponding sequences derived from N28 and Gaspé Flint genetic backgrounds showed that Vgt1 is apparently noncoding and is located Ϸ70 kb (61-76 kb, depending on the genetic background) upstream of an Ap2-like gene identified here as ZmRap2.7. This gene is orthologous to Rap2.7 (also known as TOE1), a transcription factor that regulates flowering time in Arabidopsis (13,14). No other genes were annotated between Vgt1 and ZmRap2.7. Pseudogenes due to transduplication events mediated by nonautonomous helitron elements (15) were observed in N28 and other genetic backgrounds but not in Gaspé Flint (data not shown). Within the Vgt1 region, the contrasting QTL alleles showed 29 SNPs and insertion/deletion-type polymorphisms (Indels) and one 143-bp insertion into the Gaspé Flint allele of a Mite transposon belonging to the Tourist (16) family [ Fig. 4 Lower and supporting information (SI) Fig. 5].Association M...
The expression of A'-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase (P5CR) gene was found to be higher in soybean root nodules than in leaves and roots, and its expression in roots appeared to be osmoregulated Mol Gen Genet 221: 299-305).P5CR was purified to homogeneity as a monomeric protein of 29 kilodaltons by overexpression of a soybean P5CR cDNA clone in Escherichia coli. The pH optimum of the purified P5CR was altered by increasing the salt concentration, and maximum enzyme activity was attainable at a lower pH under high salt (0.2-1 molar NaCI). Kinetic studies of the purified enzyme suggested that nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate' inhibited P5CR activity, whereas nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide+ did not. Subcellular fractionation and antibodies raised against purified soybean P5CR were used to investigate location of the enzyme in different parts of soybean as well as in leaves of transgenic tobacco plants synthesizing soybean P5CR. P5CR activity was present in cytoplasm of soybean roots and nodules as well as in leaves, but in leaves, about 15% of the activity was detected in the plastid fraction. The location of P5CR was further confirmed by western blot assay of the proteins from cytosol and plastid fractions of different parts of the plant. Expression of soybean nodule cytosolic P5CR in transgenic tobacco under the control of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter led to the accumulation of this protein exclusively in the cytoplasm, suggesting that the chloroplastic activity may be due to the presence of a plastid form of the enzyme. The different locations of P5CR in root and leaf suggested that proline may be synthesized in different subcellular compartments in root and leaf. Proline concentration was not significantly increased in transgenic plants exhibiting high level P5CR activity, indicating that reduction of P5C is not a rate-limiting step in proline production.Proline accumulation is one of the adaptations of plants to salinity and water deficit (4,22,34). The proline biosynthetic pathway in plants and its regulation in response to osmotic stress is, however, not well understood. A precise determination of the proline pathway and its compartmentalization in different tissues is essential not only for understanding the regulation of proline production, but also for establishing the role of this amino acid in conferring tolerance to salt and drought stresses. The proline pathway in plants has been proposed to be analogous to that in bacteria (7, 21), although proline can also be made from omithine (1).
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