نتایج جستجو برای: vernalization

تعداد نتایج: 824  

Journal: :Science 2004
Liuling Yan Artem Loukoianov Ann Blechl Gabriela Tranquilli Wusirika Ramakrishna Phillip SanMiguel Jeffrey L Bennetzen Viviana Echenique Jorge Dubcovsky

Plants with a winter growth habit flower earlier when exposed for several weeks to cold temperatures, a process called vernalization. We report here the positional cloning of the wheat vernalization gene VRN2, a dominant repressor of flowering that is down-regulated by vernalization. Loss of function of VRN2, whether by natural mutations or deletions, resulted in spring lines, which do not requ...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2008
Gregory S McMaster Jeffrey W White L A Hunt P D Jamieson S S Dhillon J I Ortiz-Monasterio

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Accurately representing development is essential for applying crop simulations to investigate the effects of climate, genotypes or crop management. Development in wheat (Triticum aestivum, T. durum) is primarily driven by temperature, but affected by vernalization and photoperiod, and is often simulated by reducing thermal-time accumulation using vernalization or photoperiod...

Journal: :Plant & cell physiology 2011
Daisuke Saisho Makoto Ishii Kiyosumi Hori Kazuhiro Sato

In many temperate plant species, prolonged cold treatment, known as vernalization, is one of the most critical steps in the transition from the vegetative to the reproductive stage. In contrast to recent advances in understanding the molecular basis of vernalization in Arabidopsis non-vernalization mutants or the spring growth habits of cereal crops such as wheat and barley, natural variations ...

2011
M. Cristina Casao Ernesto Igartua Ildiko Karsai Prasanna R Bhat Noelia Cuadrado M Pilar Gracia José M Lasa Ana M Casas

The process of vernalization is mainly controlled by two genes in winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), VRNH1 and VRNH2. A recessive allele at VRNH1 and a dominant allele at VRNH2 must be present to induce a vernalization requirement. In addition, this process is usually associated with greater low-temperature tolerance. Spanish barleys originated in areas with mild winters and display a reduced ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2014
Léonie Suter Marlene Rüegg Niklaus Zemp Lars Hennig Alex Widmer

Steep environmental gradients provide ideal settings for studies of potentially adaptive phenotypic and genetic variation in plants. The accurate timing of flowering is crucial for reproductive success and is regulated by several pathways, including the vernalization pathway. Among the numerous genes known to enable flowering in response to vernalization, the most prominent is FLOWERING LOCUS C...

Journal: :Current Biology 2012

Journal: :Annual review of cell and developmental biology 2009
Dong-Hwan Kim Mark R Doyle Sibum Sung Richard M Amasino

Plants have evolved many systems to sense their environment and to modify their growth and development accordingly. One example is vernalization, the process by which flowering is promoted as plants sense exposure to the cold temperatures of winter. A requirement for vernalization is an adaptive trait that helps prevent flowering before winter and permits flowering in the favorable conditions o...

2013
Mohsen Mohammadi Davoud Torkamaneh Hamid-Reza Nikkhah

Vernalization requirement is a key component in determining the overall fitness of developmental patterns of barley to its environment. We have used previously reported markers and spring-sown growth habit nursery to characterize the genotypes of barley germplasm in an applied barley breeding ground to establish a baseline of information required to understand the relationship between adaptatio...

2004

Vernalization is the process by which prolonged exposure to cold temperatures promotes flowering. Over the past century, this process has been studied extensively at the physiological level. Recent studies have provided some insight into the molecular basis of vernalization. The rich history of vernalization research has been discussed in detail in many reviews (Chouard, 1960; Lang, 1965; Berni...

Journal: :Frontiers in plant science 2016
Åshild Ergon Tone I. Melby Mats Höglind Odd A. Rognli

Plants adapted to cold winters go through annual cycles of gain followed by loss of freezing tolerance (cold acclimation and deacclimation). Warm spells during winter and early spring can cause deacclimation, and if temperatures drop, freezing damage may occur. Many plants are vernalized during winter, a process making them competent to flower in the following summer. In winter cereals, a coinc...

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