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Accurate and suitable flowering time is the basis for plants to survive, and procreate as well as adapt to the local environment. Flowering in plants, which indicates the transition from the vegetative stage to the reproductive stage, is co-regulated by various external and endogenous factors, such as photoperiod, temperature, and hormones[1]. Specifically, the morphogenesis and flowering time of soybean are precisely regulated by the photoperiod, which determines yield potential and restricts soybean cultivars to a narrow latitude range. Consequently, the molecular basis for photoperiod recognition has sparked broad interest among experts from various fields. Nowadays, many photoreceptors and circadian clock homologs, such as phytochrome A (phyA), FLAVIN-BINDING, KELCH REPEAT, F-BOX 1 (FKF1), GIGANTA (GI), Pseudo Response Regulator (PRRs) and components of Evening Complex (EC: composed of ELF3, ELF4 and LUX) are identified and characterized as being involved in the photoperiod sensitivity in angiosperms, including rice, wheat, soybean, corn, and Arabidopsis, while their regulatory mechanisms dramatically vary among the different crops[1,2,3]. A recent study by Zhao et al. revealed a dynamic transcriptional and translational suppression feedback loop between FKF1/GI-EC to determine photoperiod sensitivity in soybean[4], which provides new insights for understanding latitude adaptability and night-break response in soybean.
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Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analyzed in this study.
Wang X, He Y, Xu H, Wang L. 2024. Taiji loop composed of circadian component mediates photoperiodism in soybean. Seed Biology 3:e014 doi: 10.48130/seedbio-0024-0013 |