Blue Light Tells Plants When to Flower
Protein that marks day length also coordinates blooming genes
by Rebecca Cheung




As the days become longer in spring, plants know to bloom thanks to an interaction between several crucial proteins and blue light, scientists report in the May 25 Science. The new work describes the molecular mechanics that enables a light-sensitive protein to help switch on a suite of genes that control flowering. Understanding the biology of how plants regulate flowering could be useful for tweaking crops to start producing food earlier in the year.
“We might be able to grow three times or twice as much in a season,” says study coauthor Takato Imaizumi, a molecular biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Generally, plants need to start blooming around the time when most pollinating insects will be buzzing around — such as in early spring — to maximize their chances of reproducing.Scientists have known that plants have higher levels of the blue-light sensitive protein FKF1 toward the end of the day and that the protein is important for tracking day length. It’s also been shown that another protein, called CO, plays a key role in turning on flowering genes…
(read more: Science News)         (image: Science/AAAS)

Blue Light Tells Plants When to Flower

Protein that marks day length also coordinates blooming genes

by Rebecca Cheung

As the days become longer in spring, plants know to bloom thanks to an interaction between several crucial proteins and blue light, scientists report in the May 25 Science. The new work describes the molecular mechanics that enables a light-sensitive protein to help switch on a suite of genes that control flowering. Understanding the biology of how plants regulate flowering could be useful for tweaking crops to start producing food earlier in the year.

“We might be able to grow three times or twice as much in a season,” says study coauthor Takato Imaizumi, a molecular biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Generally, plants need to start blooming around the time when most pollinating insects will be buzzing around — such as in early spring — to maximize their chances of reproducing.Scientists have known that plants have higher levels of the blue-light sensitive protein FKF1 toward the end of the day and that the protein is important for tracking day length. It’s also been shown that another protein, called CO, plays a key role in turning on flowering genes…

(read more: Science News)         (image: Science/AAAS)

Notes

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  11. farmerinthedelll reblogged this from flowerfood and added:
    but I mean even if they engineer plants to bloom/grow earlier… what about pollination? are they gonna genetically...
  12. flowerfood reblogged this from theherbarium and added:
    The “tweaking” she speaks of is genetic modification, right?
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