ABSTRACT. Warm day and cool night conditions significantly induce reproductive spike formation in Phalaenopsis plants; hence, determining the flowering mechanism regulating the reproductive transition is important. Flowering locus T (FT) plays important roles in flowering induction in several plants. To explore spike induction by warm days and cool nights in Phalaenopsis orchids, we isolated the FT (PhFT) from Phalaenopsis hybrid Fortune Saltzman. The cDNA of PhFT was 809-bp long and contained a 531-bp open reading frame encoding a putative protein of 176 amino acids, a 58-bp 5'-untranslated region (UTR), and a 220-bp 3'-UTR. The predicted molecular mass of PhFT was 19.80 kDa, with an isoelectric point of 8.68. The PhFT was predicted to possess the conserved functional regions of the phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein superfamily. Nucleotide sequence data indicated that PhFT contained 3 introns and 4 exons. Sequence alignment and phylogenetic analyses of PhFT revealed high homology to the FT proteins of Cymbidium goeringii and Oncidium Gower Ramsey. Quantitative realtime polymerase chain reaction analysis indicated that PhFT mRNA Functional characterization of a PhFT gene was expressed in roots, apical leaves, mature leaves, and flowers. In flowers, PhFT was expressed more in developing floral buds than in mature flowers and was predominantly expressed in ovaries and petals. Ectopic expression of PhFT in Arabidopsis ft-1 mutants showed novel early-flowering phenotypes that lost their siliques. Our results indicated that the ectopic expression of PhFT could partially complement the late flowering defect in transgenic Arabidopsis ft-1 mutants. Our findings suggest that PhFT is a putative FT homolog in Phalaenopsis plants that regulates flowering transition.
ABSTRACT. NAC proteins, which are plant-specific transcription factors, have been identified to play important roles in plant response to stresses and in plant development. The full-length cDNAs that encode 2 putative NAC proteins, designated as MmATAF1 and MmNAP, respectively, were cloned from Mikania micrantha by rapid amplification of cDNA ends. The full-length cDNAs of MmATAF1 and MmNAP were 1329 and 1072 bp, respectively, and they encoded deduced proteins of 260-and 278-amino acid residues, respectively. The proteins MmATAF1 and MmNAP had a calculated molecular mass of 29.81 and 32.55 kDa and a theoretical isoelectric point of 7.08 and 9.00, respectively. Nucleotide sequence data indicated that both MmATAF1 and MmNAP contained 2 introns and 3 exons and that they shared a conserved genomic organization. Multiple sequence alignments showed that MmATAF1 showed high sequence identity with ATAF1 of Arabidopsis thaliana (61%) and that MmNAP showed high sequence identity with NAP of A. thaliana (67%) and CitNAC of Citrus sinensis Osbeck (62%). Phylogenetic analysis showed that the predicted MmATAF1 and MmNAP proteins were classified into the ATAF and NAP subgroups, respectively. Transient expression analysis of onion epidermal cells indicated nuclear localization of both MmATAF1-GFP and MmNAP-GFP fusion proteins. Semi-quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis indicated that MmATAF1 was expressed in all the tissues tested, but in varying abundance, while MmNAP was specifically expressed in stems, petioles, shoots, and leaves, but not in roots. The transcript levels of MmATAF1 and MmNAP in shoots and in infected stems were induced and strengthened by wounding, exogenous ZnSO 4 , abscisic acid, salicylic acid, and Cuscuta campestris infection on the basis of semi-quantitative RT-PCR and real-time PCR analyses, respectively. Collectively, these results indicated that MmATAF1 and MmNAP, besides having roles in M. micrantha adaptation to C. campestris infection and abiotic stresses, also integrated signals derived from both C. campestris infection and abiotic stresses.
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