Leafy

For the American religious leader, see Leafy Anderson. For the Barmy Army co-founder, see Paul Burnham.

LEAFY (abbreviated LFY) is a plant gene that causes groups of undifferentiated cells called meristems to develop into flowers instead of leaves with associated shoots.[1]

LEAFY is involved in floral meristem identity.

LEAFY encodes a plant-specific transcription factor, is found in all land plants and one of its exons have been used extensively in phylogenetic work on spermatophytes.[2] When the gene is overexpressed, the plant is less sensitive to environmental signals and flowers earlier.[3]

References

  1. Weigel D, Alvarez J, Smyth DR, Yanofsky MF, Meyerowitz EM (1992). "LEAFY controls floral meristem identity in Arabidopsis". Cell. 69 (5): 843–859. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(92)90295-N. PMID 1350515.
  2. Peter M. Hollingsworth; Richard M. Bateman; R. J. Gornall (1999). Molecular Systematics and Plant Evolution. CRC Press. p. 242. ISBN 0-7484-0908-4.
  3. Weigel D, Nilsson O (1995). "A developmental switch sufficient for flower initiation in diverse plants". Nature. 377 (6549): 495–500. doi:10.1038/377495a0. PMID 7566146.
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