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1.
A. Lecharny  R. Jacques 《Planta》1979,146(5):575-577
The elongation of the fourth internode of fully green Chenopodium polyspermum L. is strongly stimulated by far-red light (FR) given at the end of the day. The end-of-day effect is more important when the plants had been cultivated for several days with a main light period of 140 Wm-2 than with a main light period of 85 Wm-2. There exists a quantitative relationship between the FR end-of-day effect mediated by phytochrome and the value of the light fluence during the day.Abbreviations D darkness - FR far-red light - HWL white light at 140 Wm-2 - LWL white light at 85 Wm-2 - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - R red light - WL white light  相似文献   

2.
Richard Child  Harry Smith 《Planta》1987,172(2):219-229
Internode extension in young, light-grown mustard plants was measured continuously to a high degree of resolution using linear voltage displacement transducers. Plants were grown in background white light (WL) and the first internode was irradiated with supplementary far-red (FR) from fibre-optic light guides, depressing the Pfr/P (ratio of FR-absorbing form of phytochrome to total spectrophotometrically assayable phytochrome) within the internode and causing an acceleration of extension rate. The internode was sensitive to periods of FR as brief as 1 min, with a sharp increase in extension rate occurring after the return to background WL only. The mean latent period of the response to FR was approx. 10 min. Periods of FR longer than approx. 35 min caused an apparently biphasic growth response, with an initial sharp acceleration in extension rate (Phase 1) being followed by a brief deceleration and a further acceleration to a more-or-less steady elevated rate, somewhat less than the first peak (Phase 2). With such longer-term FR, extension rate decelerated upon FR switch-off after a mean lag of approx. 6 min, achieving the prestimulation extension rate within 16 min. The magnitude of the FR-induced increase in extension rate, expressed as a percentage of the rate in WL alone, was an inverse, linear function of the phytochrome photoequilibrium (i.e. Pfr/P, measured in etiolated test material irradiated under the same geometry) over the range 0.17 to 0.63. This relationship was not significantly affected by variations in backround WL fluence rate over the range 50–150 mol·m-2·s-1 and was held both for Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the response. The data provide evidence for rapid coupling/uncoupling between phytochrome and its transduction chain in the light-grown plant and for fluence-rate compensation of the regulation of extension rate. The extensive linearity of the relationship between phytochrome photoequilibrium and proportional extension rate increment allows for fine tuning in shade avoidance. The results are discussed with respect to recent evidence on the nature of phytochrome in light-grown plants and in relation to the function of phytochrome in plants growing in the natural environment.Abbreviations FR far-red light - LVDT linear voltage displacement transducer - P total spectrophotometrically assayable phytochrome - PAR photosynthetically active radiation (400–700 nm) - Pfr FR-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pr R-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light - WL white light  相似文献   

3.
Jorge J. Casal  Harry Smith 《Planta》1988,175(2):214-220
Extension growth of the first internode in fully de-etiolated mustard (Sinapis alba L.) seedlings (11–12.5 d old) is under the control of both the current phytochrome photoequilibrium (Pfr/P, ratio of the far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome to total phytochrome) and that established by short (<12 h) pretreatments. Plants were pretreated with either light pulses providing different calculated Pfr/P followed by dark incubations of different durations (a), or with a 12-h period of white light establishing different Pfr/P (b). After the pretreatments, the plants received either light pulses providing different Pfr/P, followed by dark incubations (c), or continuous white light with or without addtional far-red light (d). Thus, four experimental approaches were followed: (a)(c); (a)(d); (b)(c) and (b)(d). Extension growth during the second period (c or d) was not only affected by the current phytochrome status, but also by that established during the pretreatment period (a or b). The results show the existence of a long-term promotion of stem growth which persists after the end of the low Pfr/P pretreatment. This effect is different from the previously reported rapid effect of far-red light added to background white light as follows: (i) the duration of low Pfr/P required to effect a full response is longer (2.5 h); (ii) the duration of the promotion after returning to high Pfr/P is longer (approx. 24 h) and (iii) the locus of perception is mainly in the leaves, rather than the growing internode.Abbreviations FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pfr/P ratio between the FR-absorbing form and total phytochrome - R red light - WL white light  相似文献   

4.
A. Lecharny 《Planta》1979,145(5):405-409
The elongation of the fourth internode of fully green Chenopodium polyspermum L. is modulated by far-red light (FR) given in addition to the main light period. Two different types of organs are responsible for the photoreception of FR producing the end-of-day effect; the stem and the leaves situated just above and below the reacting internode. Photoreversibility can be obtained within certain limits in the two organs. Evidence is presented which shows that in the fully green plant there is an interorgan reaction whose primary reaction is the photoconversion of phytochrome.Abbreviations and Symbols D darkness - FR far red light - R red light - P phytochrome - PFR phytochrome in the FR absorbing form - 9+15 D (or light treatment) photoperiod of a 9 h main light period followed by 15 h of D (or light treatment)  相似文献   

5.
The physiological responses of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants that express high levels of an introduced oat (Avena sativa L.) phytochrome (phyA) gene to various light treatments are compared with those of wild-type (WT) plants. Seeds, etiolated seedlings, and light-grown plants from a homozygous transgenic tobacco line (9A4) constructed by Keller et al. (EMBO J, 8, 1005–1012, 1989) were treated with red (R), far-red (FR), or white light (WL) with or without supplemental FR light, revealing major perturbations of the normal photobiological responses. White light stimulated germination of both WT and transgenic seed, but addition of FR to the WL treatment suppressed germination. In the WT, all fluence rates tested inhibited germination, but in the transgenics, reduction effluence rate partially relieved germination from the FR-mediated inhibition. It is suggested that the higher absolute levels of the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) in the irradiated transgenics, compared to the WT, may be responsible for the reduced FR-mediated inhibition of germination in the former. Hypocotyl extension of dark-grown seedlings of both WT and transgenic lines was inhibited by continuous R or FR irradiation, typical of the high-irradiance response (HIR). After 2 d of de-etiolation in WL, the WT seedlings had lost the FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension, whereas it was retained in the transgenics. The FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension in the transgenic seedlings after de-etiolation may reflect the persistence of an, FR-HIR response mediated by the overexpressed oat PhyA phytochrome. Light-grown WT seedlings exhibited typical shade-avoidance responses when treated with WL supplemented with high levels of FR radiation. Internode and petiole extension rates were markedly increased, and the chlorophyll ab ratio decreased, in the low-R: FR treatment. The transgenics, however, showed no increases in extension growth under low-R: FR treatments, and at low fluence rates both internode and petiole extension rates were significantly decreased by low R FR. Interpretation of these data is difficult. The depression of the chlorophyll ab ratio by low R FR was identical in WT and transgenic plants, indicating that not all shade-avoidance responses of light-grown plants were disrupted by the over-expression of the introduced oat phyA gene. The results are discussed in relation to the proposal that different members of the phytochrome family may have different physiological roles.Abbreviations FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pr, Pfr red- and FR-absorbing forms of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - PhyA (PhyA) gene (encoded protein) for phytochrome - R red light - WL white light - WT wild type This work was supported by an Agricultural and Food Research Council research grant to H.S. and A.C.M.; the production of the transgenic seed was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-F602-88ER13968) to R.D.V., and by E.I. du Pont de Nemours; Dr. G.C. Whitelam is thanked for the provision of monoclonal antibodies for the immunoblot analyses.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of far-red (FR; 700–800 nm) radiation on steady-state stomatal conductance and net photosynthesis in P. vulgaris has been studied. Whereas FR radiation alone was relatively ineffective, addition of FR to a background of white light (WL; predominantly 400–700 nm) resulted in increased stomatal conductance. Stomata exhibited a marked diurnal sensitivity to FR. The action maximum for enhancing stomatal conductance was near 714 nm. A combination of FR and infra-red (IR; >800 nm) enhanced net photosynthesis when added to a background of WL. When IR alone was added to WL, there was a net decrease in photosynthesis, indicating that it is the FR waveband which is responsible for the observed photosynthetic effects. Naturally occurring levels of FR radiation (235 mol·m-2·s-1) in vegetation-canopy shade enhanced net photosynthetic CO2 gain by 28% when added to a background of 55 mol·m-2·s-1 WL.Abbreviations BL blue - FR far-red - IR infra-red - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - R red - WL white light  相似文献   

7.
J. E. Hughes  E. Wagner 《Planta》1987,172(1):131-138
The effects of far-red light given against a background of white light on the stem-extension kinetics of three-week-old, light-grown Chenopodium album seedlings were investigated. Under white light alone, the stems (cotyledon-to-apex) extended almost exactly logarithmically with time. Under these conditions the increase in log [stem length in mm] per hour was approx. 3.7·10-3, equivalent to about 1% per h during both skoto-and photoperiods. Supplementary far-red given throughout each photoperiod massively stimulated extension. The calculated logarithmic extension rate, however, slowly returned to that of the controls, following an initial large increase. This is predicted by a model in which far-red light linearly increases the extension rate of individual internodes which arise at an exponentially increasing rate. The behaviour of the model is also consistent with critical experiments in which far-red was given as a pre-treatment or transiently, as well as with other published data. Far-red stimulation of logarithmic extension rate in successive photoperiods was closely and linearly correlated with calculated phytochrome photoequilibrium. Daily short periods of supplementary far-red were especially potent in accelerating extension; the plants seemed least responsive at the end of the photoperiod.Abbreviations FR supplementary far-red light - I stem length (mm) - LSER logarithmic stem extension rate - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - R:FR red:far-red fluence rate ratio - WL white light - c calculated phytochrome photoequilibrium  相似文献   

8.
The low chlorophyll content of cotyledons of Pharbitis nil grown for 24 h in far-red light (FR) or at 18° C in white light from fluorescent lamps (WL) allows spectrophotometric measurement of phytochrome in these tissues. The (A) measurements utilize measuring beams at 730/802 nm and an actinic irradiation in excess of 90 s. The constancy of the relationship between phytochrome content and sample thickness confirms that, under these conditions of measurement, a true maximum phytochrome signal was obtained. These techniques have been used to follow changes in the form and amount of phytochrome during an inductive dark period for flowering. Following exposure to 24h WL at 18° C with a terminal 10 min red (R), Pfr was lost rapidly in darkness and approached zero in less than 1 h; during this period there was no change in the total phytochrome signal. Following exposure to 24 h FR with a terminal 10 min R, Pfr approached zero in 3 h, and the total phytochrome signal decreased by about half. The relevance of these changes to photoperiodic time measurement is discussed.Abbreviations BCJ irradiation from photographic ruby-red lamps - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pr red-absorbing form of phytochrome - P total phytochrome content - R red light - WL white light from fluorescent lamps  相似文献   

9.
D. C. Morgan  T. O'Brien  H. Smith 《Planta》1980,150(2):95-101
Treatment of the whole of aSinapis alba plant with supplementary far-red light (FR), in back-ground white light (WL), induces a rapid increase in stem extension rate. This rapid increase is regulated by the light environment of the stem itself. Supplementary FR to the stem increases extension rate after a lag period of 10–15 min. A lag period of 3–4 h follows FR irradiation of the leaf, before an increase in extension rate is detectable. When the stem is given supplementary FR, the change in extension rate which is induced increases with increasing FR fluence rate, and with decreasing phytochrome photoequilibrium. There is no difference between the effects of supplementary FR max 719 nm and supplementary FR max 739 nm for these relationships. The increase in extension rate induced by supplementary FR is reversed by an increase in the fluence rate of red light (R). These data indicate that the response is controlled by phytochrome photoequilibrium.Abbreviations B blue light - FR far-red light - R red light - WL white light - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - Pr red absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome level (=Pr+Pfr); -Pfr/Ptot, measured - ER difference in stem extension rate, before and after treatment  相似文献   

10.
A comparison of the photoregulation of development has been made for etiolated and light-grown plants of wild-type (WT) tobacco (Nicotiana tabacun L.) and an isogenic transgenic line which expresses an introduced oat phytochrome gene (phyA) under the control of a constitutive viral promoter. Etiolated seedlings of both the WT and transgenic line showed irradiance-dependent inhibition of hypocotyl growth under continuous far-red (FR) light; transgenic seedlings showed a greater level of inhibition under a given fluence rate and this is considered to be the result of the heterologous phytochrome protein (PhyA) functioning in a compatible manner with the native etiolated phytochrome. Deetiolation of WT seedlings resulted in a loss of responsiveness to prolonged FR. Light-grown transgenic seedlings, however, continued to respond in an irradiance-dependent manner to prolonged FR and it is proposed that this is a specific function of the constitutive PhyA. Mature green plants of the WT and transgenic lines showed a qualitatively similar growth promotion to a brief end-of-day FR-treatment but this response was abolished in the transgenic plants under prolonged irradiation by this same FR source. Growth inhibition (McCormac et al. 1991, Planta 185, 162–170) and enhanced levels of nitrate-reductase activity under irradiance of low red:far-red ratio, as achieved by the FR-supplementation of white light, emphasised that the introduced PhyA was eliciting an aberrant mode of photoresponse compared with the normal phytochrome population of light-grown plants. Total levels of the oat-encoded phytochrome in the etiolated transgenic tobacco were shown to be influenced by the wavelength of continuous irradiation in a manner which was qualitatively similar to that seen for the native, etiolated tobacco phytochrome, and distinct from that seen in etiolated oat tissues. These results are discussed in terms of the proposal that the constitutive oat-PhyA pool in the transgenic plants leads to a persistence of a mode of response normally restricted to the situation in etiolated plants.Abbreviations FR far-red light - R red light - WL white light - WL + FR white light supplemented with FR - HIR high-irradiance response - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pr, Pfr R- and FR-absorbing forms of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - phyA (PhyA) gene (encoded protein) for phytochrome - WT wild type This work was supported by an Agricultural and Food Research Council research grant to H.S. and A.M.; J.R. Cherry and R.D. Vierstra, (Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) are thanked for the provision of the transgenic tobacco line.  相似文献   

11.
Photoinduction and photoinhibition of germination in seed from a homozygous tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) line containing an introduced oat phyA cDNA (encoding phytochrome A) is compared with that of isogenic wild-type (WT) tobacco. Under continuous irradiation by a light source with a low redfar-red (RFR) ratio the transgenic tobacco seed appeared to be less susceptible to photoinhibition of germination compared with WT seed. However, induction of germination following a short pulse by R (666 nm) was not enhanced in the genotype transformed by oat phyA cDNA compared with the WT; neither did germination of the transgenic tobacco seed show an increased sensitivity to saturating pulses of light of longer wavelengths (666–730 nm). In seeds of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. which contained an introduced phytochrome-B-encoding cDNA, levels of dark germination were enhanced, consistent with mediation of response by phytochrome B-Pfr. The germination behaviour of Arabidopsis genotypes wich contained an introduced cDNA encoding phytochrome A, however, did not significantly differ from that of the WT.Abbreviations ABO seed transformed with Arabidopsis phyB - cDNA; CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - Pfr/Ptot phytochrome photoequilibrium - R red light - RBO seed transformed with rice phyB cDNA - RFR quantum ratio of red and far-red light - WL white light - WL + FR whitelight supplemented with far-red light - WT wild type The authors wish to thank R.D. Vierstra (Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) for providing the transgenic tobacco line, and M.T. Boylan, D. Wagner and P.H. Quail (U.C. Berkeley/USDA Plant Gene Expression Center, Albany, Calif. USA) for providing the transgenic Arabidopsis lines. The work presented in this paper was funded by grants from the Agricultural and Food Research Council (H.S., A.C.M., G.C.W.).  相似文献   

12.
Avena phytochrome A (phyA) overexpressed in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) and tomato (Lycopersicon sculentum Mill) was functionally characterised by comparing wild-type (WT) and transgenic seedlings. Different proportions of phytochrome in its far-red-absorbing form (Pfr/P) were provided by end-of-day (EOD) light pulses. Stem-length responses occurred largely in the range of low Pfr/P (3–61%) for WT seedlings and in the range of high Pfr/P (61–87%) for transgenic seedlings. A similar shift was observed when the photoperiod was interrupted by short light pulses providing different Pfr/P ratios and followed by 1 h dark incubation. In other experiments, Avena phyA was allowed to re-accumulate in darkness and subsequently phototransformed to Pfr but no extra inhibition of stem extension growth was observed. In transgenic tomato seedlings the response to EOD far-red light was faster and the response to a far-red light pulse delayed into darkness was larger than in the WT. Avena phyA Pfr remaining at the end of the photoperiod appears intrinsically unable to sustain growth inhibition in subsequent darkness. Avena phyA modifies the sensitivity and the kinetics of EOD responses mediated by native phytochrome.Abbreviations EOD end-of-day - FR far-red light - Pfr/P pro-portion of phytochrome in its FR-absorbing form - phyA phyto-chrome A - phyB phytochrome B - R red light - RFR R to FR ratio - WT wild type We thank Dr Brian Thomas for providing the antibodies used in this work, and Federico Guerendiain for his excellent technical assistance. This work was financially supported by grants UBA AG 040 and Fundacion Antorchas A-12830/1-19 (both to J.J.C.), PID-CONICET (to R.A.S. and J.J.C.), United States Department of Energy DE-FG02-88ER13968 (to R.D.V.).  相似文献   

13.
R. Oelmüller  C. Schuster 《Planta》1987,172(1):60-70
The amount of in-vitro translatable mRNA of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP) of photosystem II strongly increases in darkness (D) after a 5-min red-light pulse while continuous illumination of mustard seedlings with far-red (FR), red or white light leads only to a slight increase in the amount of translatable LHCP-mRNA. No increase can be observed after a long-wavelength FR (RG9-light) pulse. However, a FR pretreatment prior to the RG9-light pulse strongly increase LHCP-mRNA accumulation in subsequent D. This is not observed in the case of the mRNA for the small subunit of ribulose-1.5-bisphosphate carboxylase. The increase of LHCP-mRNA in D after a FR pretreatment can be inhibited by a reillumination of the seedlings with FR. The inhibition of LHCP-mRNA accumulation during continuous illumination with FR and the strong increase in D following a FR illumination was found to be independent of chlorophyll biosynthesis since no correlation between chlorophyll biosynthesis and translatable LHCP-mRNA levels could be detected. Even strong changes in the amount of intermediates of chlorophyll biosynthesis caused by application of levulinic acid or 5-aminolevulinic acid did not affect LHCP-mRNA levels. Therefore, we conclude that the appearance of LHCP-mRNA is inhibited during continuous illumination, even though illumination leads to a storage of a light singal which promotes accumulation of translatable LHCP-mRNA in D.Abbreviations c continuous - Chl chlorophyll - D darkness - FR far-red light (3.5 W·m-2) - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of photosystem II - NF Norfluration - PChl protochlorophyll(ide) - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - R red light (6.8 W·m-2) - RG9-light long-wavelength FR (10 W·m-2) - SSU small subunit of ribulose-1.5-bisphosphate carboxylase - WL white light - () Pfr/Ptot=wavelength-dependent photoequilibrium of the phytochrome system  相似文献   

14.
We have selected two recessive mutants of tomato with slightly longer hypocotyls than the wild type, one under low fluence rate (3 mol/m2/s) red light (R) and the other under low fluence rate blue light. These two mutants were shown to be allelic and further analysis revealed that hypocotyl growth was totally insensitive to far-red light (FR). We propose the gene symbol fri (far-red light insensitive) for this locus and have mapped it on chromosome 10. Immunochemically detectable phytochrome A polypeptide is essentially absent in the fri mutants as is the bulk spectrophotometrically detectable labile phytochrome pool in etiolated seedlings. A phytochrome B-like polypeptide is present in normal amounts and a small stable phytochrome pool can be readily detected by spectrophotometry in the fri mutants. Inhibition of hypocotyl growth by a R pulse given every 4 h is quantitatively similar in the fri mutants and wild type and the effect is to a large extent reversible if R pulses are followed immediately by a FR pulse. After 7 days in darkness, both fri mutants and the wild type become green on transfer to white light, but after 7 days in FR, the wild-type seedlings that have expanded their cotyledons lose their capacity to green in white light, while the fri mutants de-etiolate. Adult plants of the fri mutants show retarded growth and are prone to wilting, but exhibit a normal elongation response to FR given at the end of the daily photoperiod. The inhibition of seed germination by continuous FR exhibited by the wild type is normal in the fri mutants. It is proposed that these fri mutants are putative phytochrome A mutants which have normal pools of other phytochromes.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of overexpression of oat phytochrome A on neighbour detection and on stem-growth responses to changes in red light (R), far-red light (FR) and blue light (B) simulating neighbours were investigated in transgenic tobacco seedlings grown under natural radiation. In wild-type (WT) seedlings, stem extension growth was promoted: (1) by lowering the R:FR by means of daytime supplementary FR, end-of-day FR, neighbours reflecting FR, or selective light filters placed around the base of the shoot to reduce R without affecting FR; and (2) by lowering phytochrome-absorbable radiation (R+FR) reaching the stem. Transgenic seedlings only responded to reductions in R:FR involving no significant changes in FR irra-diance, i.e. end-of-day FR and filters placed around the stem to reduce R. Neither daytime supplementary R nor selective filters placed around the stem to reduce B affected stem growth in any genotype. In growing canopies, WT seedlings responded to the reduction of R:FR caused by FR reflected in neighbour plants. Transgenic seedlings responded to plant density about a week later, when mutual plant shading reduced R and (to a lesser extent) FR below sunlight levels. Overexpression of phytochrome A impaired early neighbour detection.  相似文献   

16.
V. Gaba  M. Black 《Planta》1985,164(2):264-271
The control by phytochrome of hypocotyl elongation of light-grown Cucumis sativus L. after a white-light period was examined. The farred-absorbing form of phytochrome inhibits hypocotyl elongation. The response to phytochrome photostationary state () is not linear; all values of from 0.004 to 0.13 promote growth maximally, in the range of values of from 0.13 to 0.22 there is a linear growth response, between values of of 0.22 and 0.35 there is again no differential effect, and for values above 0.35 there is a strong (near linear) effect of on elongation. A kinetic examination of events following the white-light period shows that the major recovery from the photoperiod requires 8.5 h of darkness. End-of-day far-red treatment produces a very different response pattern, with a minor growth stimulation within 28 min of treatment followed by a major effect after 80 to 90 min. Three hours after far-red treatment there is a transient decline in growth rate which persists for about 2 h. Over the whole time course there is a great stimulation of growth rate compared with the controls. A similar growth-rate pattern also occurs if the end-of-day is 0.48, although the magnitude of the growth stimulation is less. Two components are affected by end-of-day , namely the time at which growth recovers and the subsequent growth rate. In the long term, the latter accounts for most of the differences in elongation growth. The dark recovery when only the hypocotyl is irradiated requires 4 h, but end-of-day far-red treatment reduces this to about 1.5 h. The persistence of the far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome for many hours in darkness in these light-grown plants is also demonstrated.Abbreviations and symbols D darkness - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light - WL white light (from fluorescent lamps) - photostationary state of phytochrome - c calculated   相似文献   

17.
For dark-grown seedlings of Pharbitis nil capacity to flower in response to a single inductive dark period was established by 24 h white, far-red (FR) or ruby-red (BCJ) light and by a skeleton photoperiod of 10 min red (R)-24 h dark-10 min R. FR alone was ineffective without a brief terminal (R) irradiation, confirming that the form of phytochrome immediately prior to darkness is a crucial factor for flowering in Pharbitis. The magnitude of the flowering response was significantly greater after 24 h FR or white light (WL) (at 18° C and 27° C) than after two brief skeleton R irradiations, but the increased flowering response was not attributable to photosynthetic CO2 uptake because this could not be detected in seedlings exposed to 24 h WL at 18° C. Photophosphorylation could have contributed to the increased flowering response as photosystem I fluorescence was detectable in plants exposed to FR, BCJ, or WL, but there were large differences between flowering response and photosystem I capacity as indicated by fluorescence. We conclude that phytochrome plays a major role in photoresponses regulating flowering. There was no simple correlation between developmental changes, such as cotyledon expansion and chlorophyll formation during the 24-h irradiation period, and the capacity to flower in response to a following inductive dark period. Changes in plastid ultrastructure were considerable in light from fluorescent lamps and there was complete breakdown of the prolamellar body with or without lamellar stacking at 27 or 18° C, respectively, but plastid reorganization was minimal in FR-irradiated seedlings.Abbreviations BCJ irradiation from photographic ruby-red lamps - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing from of phytochrome - P total phytochrome content - R red light - WL white light from fluorescent lamps  相似文献   

18.
Jorge J. Casal 《Planta》1995,196(1):23-29
Etiolated seedlings of the wild-type (WT) and of the phyB-1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. were exposed to red-light (R) and far-red light (FR) treatments to characterize the action of phytochrome B on hypocotyl extension growth. A single R or FR pulse had no detectable effects on hypocotyl growth. After 24-h pre-treatment with continuous FR (FRc) a single R, compared to FR pulse inhibited (more than 70%) subsequent hypocotyl growth in the WT but not in the phyB-1 mutant. This effect of FRc was fluence-rate dependent and more efficient than continuous R (Rc) or hourly FR pulses of equal total fluence. Hypocotyl growth inhibition by Rc was larger in WT than phyB-1 seedlings when chlorophyll screening was reduced either by using broadband Rc (maximum emission 610 nm) or by using narrow-band Rc (658 nm) over short periods (24 h) or with seedlings bleached with Norflurazon. Hourly R or R + FR pulses had similar effects in WT and phyB-1 mutant etiolated seedlings. It is concluded that phytochrome B is not the only photoreceptor of Rc and that the action of phytochrome B is enhanced by a FRc high-irradiance reaction. Complementary experiments with the phyA-201 mutant indicate that this promotion of a phytochrome B-mediated response occurs via co-action with phytochrome A.Abbreviations D darkness - FR far-red light - FRc continuous FR - Pfr FR-absorbing form of phytochrome - HIR high-irradiance reaction - Pfr/P proportion of phytochrome as Pfr - phyA phytochrome A - phyB phytochrome B - R red light - Rc continuous R - WT wild-type I thank Professors R.E. Kendrick and M. Koornneef (Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands) and Professor J. Chory (Salk Institute, Calif., USA) for their kind provision of the original WT and phyB-1 and phyA-201 seed, respectively. This work was financially supported by grants PID and PID-BID from CONICET, AG 040 from Universidad de Buenos Aires and A 12830/1-000019 from Fundación Antorchas.  相似文献   

19.
N. Roth-Bejerano 《Planta》1980,149(3):252-256
The attachment of glycolate oxidase to the peroxisomal fraction derived from etiolated barley leaves (Hordeum vulgare L. cr. Dvir) is affected by light. The effect of red irradiation is reversed by subsequent far-red irradiation, indicating the involvement of phytochrome. This phytochrome effect is assumed to be related to phytochrome binding. Indeed, prevention by filipin (1.2·10-6 mol g-1 f wt) or cholesterol of phytochrome binding to membranes abolishes the effect of light on the interaction between glycolate oxidase and the peroxisomal fraction. Glycolate oxidase binding is affected by addition of quasi-ionophores such as gramicidin and filipin at a concentration of 0.6·10-3 mol g-1 f wt. This fact indicates that peroxisome-glycolate oxidase interaction may be affected by membrane potential. Since both ion transport and membrane potential are known to be affected by phytochrome, it is proposed that phytochrome acts in the light-induced modulation of glycolate oxidase attachment as a quasi-ionophore.Abbreviations GO glycolate oxidase - Pr and Pfr phytochrome forms absorbing in red and far-red, respectively - R and F red and far-red irradiation - Cumulative 20 Kp 20,000 g pellet obtained by centrifugation of the crude extract - 1 Kp 1,000 g pellet - 20 Kp 20,000 g pellet, obtained by centrifugation of 1 Kp supernatant - 1 Kp, 20 Kp and cumulative 20 Kp pellets obtained after density centrifugation through a sucrose cushion  相似文献   

20.
Photocontrol of stem elongation in light-grown plants of Fuchsia hybrida   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
D. Vince-Prue 《Planta》1977,133(2):149-156
Stems of the caulescent long-day plant, Fuchsia hybrida cv Lord Byron, showed 2 types of response to light. In one, internode length was increased by far-red irradiation given at the end of an 8 h photoperiod: the response was no greater with prolonged exposure and was less when the start of far-red was delayed. The effect of far-red was reversible by a subsequent exposure to red light. Internode length was inversely proportional to the Pfr/P ratio established before entry to darkness and there was no evidence for loss of Pfr during a 16 h dark period. The inhibitory effect of Pfr acted at a relatively late stage of internode growth. With the development of successive internodes a second response appeared in which stems lengthened following prolonged daily exposures to red or far-red light, or mixtures of the two, or to brief breaks with red or white light. In these later internodes, a short exposure to far-red near the middle of the night was not reversible by red because red alone promoted elongation at this time. Internode length increased with increase in the daily duration of light and, when light was given throughout an otherwise dark period of 16 h, with increase in illuminance to a saturation value of 200 lx from tungsten lamps. Elongation increased as a linear function of decrease in photostationary state of phytochrome down to Pfr/P0.3; however, internodes were shorter in far-red light than in 25% red/red+far-red. It was concluded that stem length is a net response to two modes of phytochrome action. An inductive effect of Pfr inhibits a late stage in internode expansion, and a phytochrome reaction which operates only in light (and may involve pigment cycling) promotes an early stage of internode development. Stem elongation is thus a function both of the daily duration of light and its red/red+far-red content. The outgrowth of axillary buds was controlled by the first type of phytochrome action only.Abbreviations and symbols FR far red light - R red light - P phytochrome - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red light absorbing form - SD 8 h short days - LDP long-day plant - SDP short-day plant  相似文献   

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