
New Clue About Plants' Sunlight Sensors
RevealedBy Marcia Wood August 19, 1999Plants cant see, but they can
sense sunlight--with molecules called phytochromes. Now, in a letter in the
August 19 issue of Nature,
California researchers report discovering a new clue to a mostly mysterious
process: how do phytochromes switch on genes to command a plant to respond to
sunlight? The genes may trigger the plant to flower, for instance, or to make
sugar--for energy--from sunlight, air and water. The scientists, with the University of
California at Berkeley, have discovered that a type of phytochrome known as
phytochrome B will, when activated by sunlight, bind to a protein called PIF3.
They made the discovery in Albany, Calif., at the
Plant Gene
Expression Center, a joint venture of the university and the Agricultural
Research Service, USDA's chief research
agency. The binding of sunlight-activated phytochrome B to PIF3 is a previously
unknown step. Phytochrome B doesn't bind if it is kept in the dark, according
to lab tests by Min Ni, James M. Tepperman and Peter H. Quail at Albany. The scientists expect their investigations may eventually lead to new ways
to change when and how plants respond to sunlight. This could speed development
of genetically engineered plants that, for example, germinate or flower at
times controlled by growers. What's more, new clues about how phytochrome B
interacts with PIF3 to control genes should serve as a helpful new model of how
other signaling pathways might work, such as those that control genes for
resistance to drought or insects. Phytochromes detect light in the red or far-red parts of the spectrum. They
can determine the ratio of red to far-red light, and accordingly become active
or inactive. This allows seeds to tell whether they are close to the soil
surface, for example, and allows plants to time daylength, so that they can
flower at the correct time of year. Scientific contact: Peter H.
Quail, ARS/University of California
at Berkeley Plant Gene Expression Center, 800 Buchanan St., Albany, CA 94710,
phone (510) 559-5900, fax (510) 559-5678,
[email protected]. U.S. Department of Agriculture | |