Flowering of Arabidopsis is regulated by several environmental and endogenous signals. An important integrator of these inputs is the FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) gene, which encodes a small, possibly mobile protein. A primary response to floral induction is the activation of FT RNA expression in leaves. Because flowers form at a distant site, the shoot apex, these data suggest that FT primarily controls the timing of flowering. Integration of temporal and spatial information is mediated in part by the bZIP transcription factor FD, which is already expressed at the shoot apex before floral induction. A complex of FT and FD proteins in turn can activate floral identity genes such as APETALA1 (AP1).
Plants are highly sensitive to temperature and can perceive a difference of as little as 1 degrees C. How temperature is sensed and integrated in development is unknown. In a forward genetic screen in Arabidopsis, we have found that nucleosomes containing the alternative histone H2A.Z are essential to perceiving ambient temperature correctly. Genotypes deficient in incorporating H2A.Z into nucleosomes phenocopy warm grown plants, and show a striking constitutive warm temperature transcriptome. We show that nucleosomes containing H2A.Z display distinct responses to temperature in vivo, independently of transcription. Using purified nucleosomes, we are able to show that H2A.Z confers distinct DNA-unwrapping properties on nucleosomes, indicating a direct mechanism for the perception of temperature through DNA-nucleosome fluctuations. Our results show that H2A.Z-containing nucleosomes provide thermosensory information that is used to coordinate the ambient temperature transcriptome. We observe the same effect in budding yeast, indicating that this is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism.
Plants are responsive to temperature, and can distinguish differences of 1ºC. In Arabidopsis, warmer temperature accelerates flowering and increases elongation growth (thermomorphogenesis). The mechanisms of temperature perception are however largely unknown. We describe a major thermosensory role for the phytochromes (red light receptors) during the night. Phytochrome null plants display a constitutive warm temperature response, and consistent with this, we show in this background that the warm temperature transcriptome 2 becomes de-repressed at low temperatures. We have discovered phytochrome B (phyB) directly associates with the promoters of key target genes in a temperature dependent manner.The rate of phyB inactivation is proportional to temperature in the dark, enabling phytochromes to function as thermal timers, integrating temperature information over the course of the night. One Sentence Summary:The plant temperature transcriptome is controlled at night by phytochromes, acting as thermoresponsive transcriptional repressors. Main Text:Plant development is responsive to temperature, and the phenology and distribution of crops and wild plants have already altered in response to climate change (1, 2). In Arabidopsis thaliana, warm temperature-mediated elongation growth and flowering is dependent on the bHLH transcription factors PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTOR4 and 5 (PIF4 and 5) (3-6). Growth at 27ºC reduces the activity of the Evening Complex (EC) resulting in greater PIF4 transcription. The EC is a transcriptional repressor made up of the proteins EARLY FLOWERING3 (ELF3), ELF4 and LUX ARRHYTHMO (LUX) (7-9). To test if the EC is also required for hypocotyl elongation responses below 22ºC, we examined the behavior of elf3-1 and lux-4 at 12 and 17ºC. Hypocotyl elongation in elf3-1 and lux-4 is largely suppressed at lower temperatures (Fig. 1A, B), which is consistent with cold temperatures being able to suppress PIF4 overexpression phenotypes (10). Since PHYTOCHROME B (PHYB) was identified as a QTL for thermal responsiveness and PIF4 activity is regulated by phytochromes (8, 11), we investigated whether these red light receptors control hypocotyl elongation in the range 12 to 22ºC. Plants lacking phytochrome activity (12) show constitutively long hypocotyls at 12ºC and 17ºC. Thus phytochromes are essential for responding to temperature (Fig. 1C, D and Fig. S1).We used transcriptome analysis to determine whether disrupted thermomorphogenesis in phyABCDE is specific for temperature signaling or is a consequence of misregulated growth pathways. To capture diurnal variation in thermoresponsiveness, we sampled seedlings over 24 hours at 22 and 27ºC. Clustering analysis reveals 20 groups of transcripts ( Fig. 2A and Fig. S3; described in supplement). Thermomorphogenesis occurs predominantly at night and is driven by PIF4. Consistent with this, we observe PIF4 is present in cluster 20, which is more highly expressed at 27ºC during darkness. Clusters 15 and 16 represent the other major groups of 3 nighttim...
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