Vantunen AJ 1996
- Authors:Vantunen AJ
- Title: MOLECULAR CONTROL OF FLORAL ORGANOGENESIS IN HIGHER PLANTS - THE ABCD
MODEL
- Location: Netherlands Journal of Zoology 1996;46(1-2):91-96
- Abstract: Plants are an important group of organisms which are capable of
auxotrophic growth and therefore have a vital function to maintain life
on earth. Although a number of plant species reproduce asexually, most
plant species use specialised structures, flowers, for sexual
reproduction. Compared with animal systems surprisingly little is known
about the molecular processes governing organogenesis. However during the
last five years a number of regulatory genes have been identified,
isolated and characterized which are controlling the onset of
developmental programmes leading to the determination and development of
the various floral organs. The function of these genes was studied using
genetic and molecular genetic techniques. Three classes of genes can be
discriminated which are determining the developmental switches from
vegetative meristem (class I), via floral meristem (class II) into the
various organ primordia (class III). The genes involved encode
transcription factors which function in a complex network of regulatory
proteins. The final fates of the floral organ primordia are determined by
the so-called ABCD genes. The activity of those genes can be summarised
in the ABCD model which provides a simplified way to describe how the
identity of each floral organ is determined. [References: 11]
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