Sa. Taylor et Ic. Murfet, FLOWERING IN PISUM - IDENTIFICATION OF A NEW PPD ALLELE AND ITS PHYSIOLOGICAL ACTION AS REVEALED BY GRAFTING, Physiologia Plantarum, 97(4), 1996, pp. 719-723
The late flowering, quantitative long day habit of wild type pea (Pisu
m sativum L.) is conferred by the joint presence of dominant genes Sn,
Dne and Ppd. Grafting studies have shown that flowering in wild type
plants is delayed under short days by formation of a graft-transmissib
le inhibitor and that the early flowering, day neutral mutants sn and
dne are deficient in this inhibitor. However, the physiological action
of the Ppd gene has not been examined by grafting and the possibility
exists that the ppd mutation causes early flowering and a day neutral
habit by blocking response to, rather than synthesis of, the inhibito
r. We here identify a second, more severe (probably null) mutant allel
e (ppd-2) at the Ppd locus and show that flowering was delayed by 4 no
des in a ppd-2 shoot grafted to a wild type stock, and promoted by 13
nodes in a wild type shoot grafted to a ppd-2 stock. Thus a ppd-2 shoo
t can respond to inhibitor donated by a wild type stock but a ppd-2 st
ock is unable to provide sufficient inhibitor to prevent early flower
initiation in a wild type shoot. We conclude genes Sn, Dne and Ppd eac
h control steps in the synthesis of the flower inhibitor. Grafts among
the sn, dne and ppd mutants gave an indication that the three genes m
ay act in the sequence Sn, Ppd, Dne, but possible cases of physiologic
al complementation need to be tested using null mutants in the same ge
netic background.