Nature, Vol.379, No.6568, 791-797, 1996
Control of Inflorescence Architecture in Antirrhinum
Flowering plants exhibit two types of inflorescence architecture : determinate and indeterminate. The centroradialis mutation causes the normally indeterminate inflorescence of Antirrhinum to terminate in a flower. We show that centroradialis is expressed in the inflorescence apex a few days after floral induction, and interacts with the floral-meristemidentity gene floricaula to regulate flower position and morphology. The protein CEN is similar to animal proteins that associate with lipids and GTP-binding proteins. We propose a model for how different inflorescence structures may arise through the action and evolution of centroradialis.
Keywords:FLOWER DEVELOPMENT;SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE;GENE;MAJUS;TRANSPOSON;MUTATIONS;MERISTEM;CLONING;LOCUS