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Plant Cell Advance Online Publication Published on July 3, 2003; 10.1105/tpc.012856
Received April 11, 2003 The Interaction of Two Homeobox Genes, BREVIPEDICELLUS and PENNYWISE , Regulates Internode Patterning in the Arabidopsis Inflorescence
1
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California
94720
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: maizesh{at}nature.berkeley.edu.
Plant architecture results from the activity of the shoot apical meristem, which initiates leaves, internodes, and axillary meristems. KNOTTED1-like homeobox (KNOX) genes are expressed in specific patterns in the shoot apical meristem and play important roles in plant architecture. KNOX proteins interact with BEL1-like (BELL) homeodomain proteins and together bind a target sequence with high affinity. We have obtained a mutation in one of the Arabidopsis BELL genes, PENNYWISE (PNY), that appears phenotypically similar to the KNOX mutant brevipedicellus (bp). Both bp and pny have randomly shorter internodes and display a slight increase in the number of axillary branches. The double mutant shows a synergistic phenotype of extremely short internodes interspersed with long internodes and increased branching. PNY is expressed in inflorescence and floral meristems and overlaps with BP in a discrete domain of the inflorescence meristem where we propose the internode is patterned. The physical association of the PNY and BP proteins suggests that they participate in a complex that regulates early patterning events in the inflorescence meristem.
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