Blue light regulated shade avoidance

Most plants grow in dense vegetation with the risk of being out-competed by neighboring plants. These neighbors can be detected not only through the depletion in light quantity that they cause, but also through the change in light quality, which plants perceive using specific photoreceptors. Both the reduction of the red:far-red ratio and the depletion of blue light are signals that induce a set of phenotypic traits, such as shoot elongation and leaf hyponasty, which increase the likelihood of light capture in dense plant stands. This set of phenotypic responses are part of the so called "shade avoidance syndrome" (SAS). This addendum discusses recent findings on the regulation of the SAS of Arabidopsis thaliana upon blue light depletion. Keller et al. and Keuskamp et al. show that the low blue light attenuation induced shade avoidance response of seedling and rosette-stage A. thaliana plants differ in their hormonal regulation. These studies also show there is a regulatory overlap with the R:FR-regulated SAS.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keuskamp, Diederik H., Keller, Mercedes M., Ballaré, Carlos L., Pierik, Ronald
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Cryptochrome, Hormones, Light, Photoreceptor, Phytochrome, Shade avoidance,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/blue-light-regulated-shade-avoidance
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