SPA1: A New Genetic Locus Involved in Phytochrome A–Specific Signal Transduction
Open Access
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Cell
- Vol. 10 (1), 19-33
- https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.10.1.19
Abstract
To identify mutants potentially defective in signaling intermediates specific to phytochrome A (phyA), we screened for extragenic mutations that suppress the morphological phenotype exhibited by a weak phyA mutant (phyA-105) of Arabidopsis. A new recessive mutant, designated spa1 (for suppressor of phyA-105), was isolated and mapped to the bottom of chromosome 2. spa1 phyA-105 double mutants exhibit restoration of several responses to limiting fluence rates of continuous far-red light that are absent in the parental phyA-105 mutant, such as deetiolation, anthocyanin accumulation, and a far-red light–induced inability of seedlings to green upon subsequent transfer to continuous white light. spa1 mutations do not cause a phenotype in darkness, indicating that the suppression phenotype is light dependent. Enhanced photoresponsiveness was observed in spa1 seedlings in a wild-type PHYA background as well as in the mutant phyA-105 background but not in a mutant phyA null background. These results indicate that phyA is necessary in a non-allele-specific fashion for the expression of the spa1 mutant phenotype and that phyB to phyE are not sufficient for this effect. Taken together, the data suggest that spa1 mutations specifically amplify phyA signaling and therefore that the SPA1 locus encodes a component that acts negatively early in the phyA-specific signaling pathway.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Light modulation of vegetative development.Plant Cell, 1997
- The pef mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana define lesions early in the phytochrome signaling pathwayThe Plant Journal, 1996
- LIGHT CONTROL OF SEEDLING DEVELOPMENTAnnual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology, 1996
- Far-red light blocks greening of Arabidopsis seedlings via a phytochrome A-mediated change in plastid development.Plant Cell, 1996
- The amino‐terminus of phytochrome A contains two distinct functional domainsThe Plant Journal, 1996
- Phytochrome A Regulates Red-Light Induction of Phototropic Enhancement in ArabidopsisPlant Physiology, 1996
- Missense mutations define a restricted segment in the C-terminal domain of phytochrome A critical to its regulatory activity.Plant Cell, 1995
- hy8, a new class of arabidopsis long hypocotyl mutants deficient in functional phytochrome A.Plant Cell, 1993
- PHYTOCHROME: A Light-activated Molecular Switch that Regulates Plant Gene ExpressionAnnual Review of Genetics, 1991
- Phenotypic and Genetic Analysis of det2, a New Mutant That Affects Light-Regulated Seedling Development in Arabidopsis.Plant Cell, 1991