Yasufumi Daimon
Kyoto University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yasufumi Daimon.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2008
Michitaka Notaguchi; Mitsutomo Abe; Takahiro Kimura; Yasufumi Daimon; Toshinori Kobayashi; Ayako Yamaguchi; Yuki Tomita; Koji Dohi; Masashi Mori; Takashi Araki
Day length perceived by a leaf is a major environmental factor that controls the timing of flowering. It has been believed that a mobile, long-distance signal called florigen is produced in the leaf under inductive day length conditions, and is transported to the shoot apex where it triggers floral morphogenesis. Grafting experiments have shown that florigen is transmissible from a donor plant that has been subjected to inductive day length to an uninduced recipient plant. However, the nature of florigen has long remained elusive. Arabidopsis FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) is expressed in cotyledons and leaves in response to inductive long days (LDs). FT protein, with a basic region/leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factor FD, acts in the shoot apex to induce target meristem identity genes such as APETALA1 (AP1) and initiates floral morphogenesis. Recent studies have provided evidence that the FT protein in Arabidopsis and corresponding proteins in other species are an important part of florigen. Our work shows that the FT activity, either from overexpressing or inducible transgenes or from the endogenous gene, to promote flowering is transmissible through a graft junction, and that an FT protein with a T7 tag is transported from a donor scion to the apical region of recipient stock plants and becomes detectable within a day or two. The sequence and structure of mRNA are not of critical importance for the long-distance action of the FT gene. These observations led to the conclusion that the FT protein, but not mRNA, is the essential component of florigen.
The Plant Cell | 2013
Masaki Niwa; Yasufumi Daimon; Ken Ichi Kurotani; Asuka Higo; Jose L. Pruneda-Paz; Ghislain Breton; Nobutaka Mitsuda; Steve A. Kay; Masaru Ohme-Takagi; Motomu Endo; Takashi Araki
This study reports that BRC1 in axillary buds interacts with and inhibits the function of the florigen protein FT. This serves as an additional mode of regulation of floral transition in axillary meristems. Plant architecture shows a large degree of developmental plasticity. Some of the key determinants are the timing of the floral transition induced by a systemic flowering signal (florigen) and the branching pattern regulated by key factors such as BRANCHED1 (BRC1). Here, we report that BRC1 interacts with the florigen proteins FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) and TWIN SISTER OF FT (TSF) but not with TERMINAL FLOWER1, a floral repressor. FT protein induced in leaves moves into the subtended bud, suggesting that FT protein also plays a role in promotion of the floral transition in the axillary meristem (AM). The brc1-2 mutant shows an earlier floral transition in the axillary shoots compared with the wild type, suggesting that BRC1 plays a role in delaying the floral transition of the AMs. Genetic and gene expression analyses suggest that BRC1 interferes with florigen (FT and TSF) function in the AMs. Consistent with this, BRC1 ectopically expressed in the shoot apical meristem delays the floral transition in the main shoot. These results taken together suggest that BRC1 protein interacts with FT and TSF proteins and modulates florigen activity in the axillary buds to prevent premature floral transition of the AMs.
Plant Journal | 2009
Hiroaki Tamaki; Mineko Konishi; Yasufumi Daimon; Mitsuhiro Aida; Masao Tasaka; Munetaka Sugiyama
Adventitious organogenesis in plant tissue culture involves de novo formation of apical meristems and should therefore provide important information about the fundamentals of meristem gene networks. We identified novel factors required for neoformation of the shoot apical meristem (SAM) through an analysis of shoot regeneration in root initiation defective3 (rid3) and root growth defective3 (rgd3) temperature-sensitive mutants of Arabidopsis. After induction of callus to regenerate shoots, cell division soon ceased and was then reactivated locally in the surface region, resulting in formation of mounds of dense cells in which adventitious-bud SAMs were eventually constructed. The rgd3 mutation inhibited reactivation of cell division and suppressed expression of CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON1 (CUC1), CUC2 and SHOOT MERISTEMLESS (STM). In contrast, the rid3 mutation caused excess ill-controlled cell division on the callus surface. This was intimately related to enhanced and broadened expression of CUC1. Positional cloning revealed that the RGD3 and RID3 genes encode BTAF1 (a kind of TATA-binding protein-associated factor) and an uncharacterized WD-40 repeat protein, respectively. In the early stages of shoot regeneration, RGD3 was expressed (as was CUC1) in the developing cell mounds, whereas RID3 was expressed outside the cell mounds. When RID3 was over-expressed artificially, the expression levels of CUC1 and STM were significantly reduced. Taken together, these findings show that both negative regulation by RID3 and positive regulation by RGD3 of the CUC-STM pathway participate in proper control of cell division as a prerequisite for SAM neoformation.
Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2009
Michitaka Notaguchi; Yasufumi Daimon; Mitsutomo Abe; Takashi Araki
Day length perceived by a leaf is a major environmental factor that controls the timing of flowering. It has been believed that a mobile, long-distance signal called florigen is produced in the leaf, and is transported to the shoot apex where it triggers floral morphogenesis. Grafting experiments have shown that florigen is transmissible from a donor plant that has been subjected to inductive day length to an un-induced recipient plant. However, the nature of florigen has long remained elusive. Recent studies have provided evidence that the FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) protein in Arabidopsis and corresponding proteins in other species are an important part of florigen. Our work showed that the FT activity, either from overexpressing or inducible transgenes or from the endogenous gene, to promote flowering is transmissible through a graft junction, and that an FT protein with a T7 tag (FT-T7) is transported from a donor scion to the apical region of recipient stock plants and becomes detectable within a short period of 24–48 h. That the FT-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion protein (FT:GFP) retains limited ability for graft-transmissible action was confirmed.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2018
Motomu Endo; Masayasu Yoshida; Youhei Sasaki; Katsuya Negishi; Kobo Horikawa; Yasufumi Daimon; Kenichi Kurotani; Michitaka Notaguchi; Mitsutomo Abe; Takashi Araki
In many plants, timing of flowering is regulated by day length. In Arabidopsis, florigen, FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) protein, is synthesized in leaf phloem companion cells in response to long days and is transported to the shoot apical meristem (SAM) through the phloem. The temporal aspects of florigen transportation have been studied in various plants by physiological experiments. Nevertheless, little is known about how FT protein transportation is regulated in Arabidopsis. In this study, we performed heat shock-based transient FT induction in a single leaf blade and detected the FT protein in the shoot apex by 2D-PAGE. We demonstrated that detectable amounts of FT were transported from the leaf to the shoot apex within 8 h, and subsequent FT-induced target gene expression was detected within 8-12 h. Furthermore, we identified three amino acid residues (V70, S76 and R83) where missense mutations led to reduced mobility. Interestingly, these FT variants lost only their transportation ability, but retained their flowering promotion capacity, suggesting that discrete amino acids are involved in flowering regulation and transport regulation. Since the interaction with FT-INTERACTING PROTEIN 1 (FTIP1) was not affected in these FT variants, we hypothesize that the three amino acid residues are not involved in the FTIP1-mediated pathway of uploading, but rather in the subsequent step(s) of FT transport.
Science | 2005
Mitsutomo Abe; Yasushi Kobayashi; Sumiko Yamamoto; Yasufumi Daimon; Ayako Yamaguchi; Yoko Ikeda; Harutaka Ichinoki; Michitaka Notaguchi; Koji Goto; Takashi Araki
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2003
Yasufumi Daimon; Kazuo Takabe; Masao Tasaka
Plant Journal | 2004
Ken-ichiro Taoka; Yoshiko Yanagimoto; Yasufumi Daimon; Ken-ichiro Hibara; Mitsuhiro Aida; Masao Tasaka
Plant Journal | 2013
Soo-Cheul Yoo; Cheng Chen; Maria R. Rojas; Yasufumi Daimon; Byung-Kook Ham; Takashi Araki; William J. Lucas
Journal of Plant Research | 2009
Michitaka Notaguchi; Yasufumi Daimon; Mitsutomo Abe; Takashi Araki