How do plants know when it is time to flower? Researchers at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) have studied this question and identified two genes that are key to this process. They were able to show that the ELF3 and GI genes control the plants’ internal clock, which monitors the length of daylight and determines when it is the right time to flower. The findings could help to breed plants that are better adapted to their environments. The study was published in The Plant Journal.

Like animals, plants also have an internal clock that prepares internal cellular mechanisms in anticipation of upcoming environmental changes. This ensures that plants only perform specific tasks at the most suitable time of the day. For instance, during the day, they carry out photosynthesis, extracting energy from sunlight. However, completely different processes occur at night in the absence of sunlight. Many plants grow significantly more than during the day. So in order to tell the difference between day and night, plants have special receptors in their cells that can sense sunlight and start and stop metabolic processes as needed.

“Just like humans, plants also have a so-called circadian clock. This is a complex network of genes and proteins that enables plants to control different processes in relation to time so that their biorhythm is perfectly synchronized to the day-night cycle,” explains Dr. Usman Anwer from the Institute for Agricultural and Nutritional Sciences at MLU.

Via circadian mechanisms, plants are able to anticipate certain regularities in their environment, such as the alternation of day and night, and adjust accordingly. This also includes flowering at the right time. “Plants orient themselves to the ratio between the hours of sunlight and darkness. Some plants only flower when the days are particularly long. Others only flower when the nights exceed a certain length of time,” explains Anwer. This is not surprising; after all, different plant species flower at different times of the year when the days have different lengths.

In this new study, the MLU researchers wanted to understand which genes control a plant’s internal clock, thereby influencing the flowering process. They did this by investigating two genes that were already known to play a crucial role in the circadian clock: ELF3 and GI. “These two genes have always been studied separately. Our goal was to understand how the two genes work together and how they jointly influence the circadian clock, for example, by regulating when a plant flowers,” says Anwer.

Find your dream job in the space industry. Check our Space Job Board »

The team investigated how the two genes functioned thale cress, also known as the Arabidopsis thaliana, well-known model plant for scientific research. The scientists bred plants that had various genetic defects. In one group, the ELF3 gene was defective; in the second group, it was the GI gene. In the third group, both genes were switched off. The researchers then observed how the plants reacted to different periods of light. They found that when one of the two genes was defective, the plants’ circadian clock still functioned on a rudimentary basis. When both genes were switched off, the plant no longer reacted at all. “The plants could still perceive the light, but they could no longer tell how long the light lasted. This explains why the mutants with the double gene defect produced flowers at the same time under different lengths of light period,” Answer concludes.

However, light is not the only external source of information for the circadian clock, says the researcher. The ambient temperature also changes during the course of the day and year. In a follow-up project, the scientists want to understand how temperature influences plant flowering and whether temperature can compensate for the lack of information about light. The findings could also be important for plant breeding. Most plants have adapted to their original environment in such a way that they require a specific ratio between hours of sunlight and darkness in order to flower. The new findings could allow plants designed to flower in other places and produce good yields.


Provided by: Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

More information: Muhammad Usman Anwer et al. Photoperiod sensing of the circadian clock is controlled by EARLY FLOWERING 3 and GIGANTEAThe Plant Journal (2019). DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14604Journal information:The Plant Journal

Image Credit: CC0 Public Domain