Sugar beet,
Beta vulgaris spp.
vulgaris is a biennial long day plant with an obligate requirement for vernalization (prolonged exposure to low temperature). As a
spring crop in temperate European climates, it is vulnerable to vernalization-induced premature bolting and flowering, resulting
in reduced crop yield and quality. Gibberellins (GAs) play important roles in key physiological processes including stem elongation
(bolting) and flowering and are, therefore, potential targets for controlling reproductive growth in sugar beet. We show that
the
BvGA20ox gene, which encodes an enzyme necessary for GA biosynthesis, was transcriptionally activated in apices of sugar beet plants
after vernalization and that GA metabolism can be manipulated to delay bolting in vernalized plants. We demonstrate that down-regulation
of GA responses by transformation with the
Arabidopsis thaliana
gai gene (which represses GA signalling), under its own promoter (
pgai::gai) or deactivation of GA by over-expression of the
Phaseolus coccineus (bean)
GA2ox1 gene, which inactivates GA, increased the required post vernalization thermal time (an accurate and stable measure of physiological
time), to bolt by ~300°Cd. This resulted in agronomically significant bolting time delays of ~2 weeks and 3 weeks in the
pgai::gai and 3
5S::PcGA2ox1 plants, respectively. Our data represent the first transgenic sugar beet model to (1) show that GA signalling can be used
to improve crops by manipulation of the transition to reproductive growth; and (2) provide evidence that GA is required for
seed set in sugar beet.
Keywords Gibberellin - Sugar beet - Vernalization-induced bolting & flowering - Seed set - DELLA - Guard cell protoplast transformation