Browsing by Author "Rey, Camila"
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- ItemGuía práctica para integrar la Política Nacional de Desarrollo Rural en el Plan de Desarrollo Comunal(ODEPA, 2021) Orellana Ossandón, Arturo; Mollenhauer Gajardo, Katherine Alexandra; Rey, Camila; Altamirano Estay, Paula Magdalena; Moreno Alba, Daniel Felipe; Irizarri Otarola, Diego Sebastián; Icaza Noguera, María del Carmen
- ItemGuía práctica para integrar la Política Nacional de Desarrollo Rural en la Estrategia Regional de Desarrollo(ODEPA, 2023) Orellana Ossandón, Arturo; Mollenhauer Gajardo, Katherine Alexandra; Rey, Camila; Altamirano Estay, Paula Magdalena; Moreno Alba, Daniel Felipe; Irizarri Otarola, Diego Sebastián; Icaza Noguera, María del Carmen
- ItemNew Clothes for the Jasmonic Acid Receptor COI1: Delayed Abscission, Meristem Arrest and Apical Dominance(PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2013) Kim, Joonyup; Dotson, Bradley; Rey, Camila; Lindsey, Joshua; Bleecker, Anthony B.; Binder, Brad M.; Patterson, Sara E.In a screen for delayed floral organ abscission in Arabidopsis, we have identified a novel mutant of CORONATINE INSENSITIVE 1 (COI1), the F-box protein that has been shown to be the jasmonic acid (JA) co-receptor. While JA has been shown to have an important role in senescence, root development, pollen dehiscence and defense responses, there has been little focus on its critical role in floral organ abscission. Abscission, or the detachment of organs from the main body of a plant, is an essential process during plant development and a unique type of cell separation regulated by endogenous and exogenous signals. Previous studies have indicated that auxin and ethylene are major plant hormones regulating abscission; and here we show that regulation of floral organ abscission is also controlled by jasmonic acid in Arabidopsis thaliana. Our characterization of coi1-1 and a novel allele (coi1-37) has also revealed an essential role in apical dominance and floral meristem arrest. In this study we provide genetic evidence indicating that delayed abscission 4 (dab4-1) is allelic to coi1-1 and that meristem arrest and apical dominance appear to be evolutionarily divergent functions for COI1 that are governed in an ecotype-dependent manner. Further characterizations of ethylene and JA responses of dab4-1/coi1-37 also provide new information suggesting separate pathways for ethylene and JA that control both floral organ abscission and hypocotyl growth in young seedlings. Our study opens the door revealing new roles for JA and its interaction with other hormones during plant development.