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1.
Cell-free extracts capable of converting [14C]-labeled gibberellins (GAs) were prepared from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves. [14C]-labeled GAs, prepared enzymically from [14C]mevalonic acid, were incubated with these extracts, and products were identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The following pathway was found to operate in extracts from spinach leaves grown under long day (LD) conditions: GA12 → GA53 → GA44 → GA19 → GA20. The pH optima for the enzymic conversions of [14C]GA53, [14C]GA44 and [14C]GA19 were approximately 7.0, 8.0, and 6.5, respectively. These three enzyme activities required Fe2+, α-ketoglutarate and O2 for activity, and ascorbate stimulated the conversion of [14C]GA53 and [14C]GA19. Extracts from plants given LD or short days (SD) were examined, and enzymic activities were measured as a function of exposure to LD, as well as to darkness following 8 LD. The results indicate that the activities of the enzymes oxidizing GA53 and GA19 are increased in LD and decreased in SD or darkness, but that the enzyme activity oxidizing GA44 remains high irrespective of light or dark treatment. This photoperiodic control of enzyme activity is not due to the presence of an inhibitor in plants grown in SD. These observations offer an explanation for the higher GA20 content of spinach plants in LD than in SD.  相似文献   

2.
Metabolism of [14C]gibberellin (GA) A12 (GA12) and [14C]gibberellin A12-aldehyde (GA12-aldehyde) was examined in cotyledons and seed coats from developing seeds of pea (Pisum sativum L.). Both were metabolized to only 13-hydroxylated GAs in cotyledons but to 13-hydroxylated and non-13-hydroxylated GAs in seed coats. The metabolism of [14C]GA12 was slower in seed coats than in cotyledons. [14C]GA12-aldehyde was also metabolized to conjugates in seed coats. Seed coat [14C]-metabolites produced from [14C]GA12-aldehyde were isolated by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Conjugates were base hydrolyzed and the free GAs reisolated by HPLC and identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. [14C]GA53-aldehyde, [14C]GA12-aldehyde conjugate, and [14C]GA53-aldehyde conjugate were major metabolites produced from [14C]GA12-aldehyde by seed coats aged 20-22 days or older. The dilution of 14C in these compounds by 12C, as compared to the supplied [14C]GA12-aldehyde, indicated that they are endogenous. Feeding [14C]GA53-aldehyde led to the production of [14C]GA53-aldehyde conjugate in seed coats and shoots and also to 13-hydroxylated GAs in shoots. Labeled GAs, recovered from plant tissue incubated with either [14C]GA12, [14C]GA12-aldehyde, or [3H]GA9, were used as appropriate markers for the recovery of endogenous GAs from seed coats or cotyledons. These GAs were purified by HPLC and identified and quantified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. GA15, GA24, GA9, GA51, GA51-catabolite, GA20, GA29, and GA29-catabolite were detected in seed coats, whereas GA9, GA53, GA44, GA19, GA20, and GA29 were found in cotyledons. The highest GA levels were for GA20 and GA29 in cotyledons (783 and 912 nanograms per gram fresh weight, respectively) and for GA29 and GA29-catabolite in seed coats (1940 and > 1940 nanograms per gram fresh weight, respectively).  相似文献   

3.
Application of gibberellin A53 (GA53) to short-day (SD)-grown spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) plants caused an increase in petiole length and leaf angle similar to that found in plants transferred to long days (LD). [2H] GA53 was fed to plants in SD, LD, and in a SD to LD transition experiment, and the metabolites were identified by gas chromatography with selected ion monitoring. After 2, 4, or 6 SD, [2H]GA53 was converted to [2H]GA19 and [2H]GA44. No other metabolites were detected. After 2 LD, only [2H] GA20 was identified. In the transition experiment in which plants were given 4 SD followed by 2 LD, all three metabolites were found. The results demonstrate unequivocally that GA19, GA20, and GA44 are metabolic products of GA53, and strongly suggest that photoperiod regulates GA metabolism, in part, by controlling the conversion of GA19 to GA20.  相似文献   

4.
The role of gibberellins (GAs) in photoperiodic control of leaf elongation in Poa pratensis was studied by both application of exogenous GAs and analysis of endogenous GAs. Leaf elongation was strongly increased under long day (LD, 24 h) conditions at both 9 and 21°C, leaf length at 9°C LD being similar to that in plants grown in short days (SD, 8 h) at 21°C. However, even at 21°C leaf elongation was enhanced by LD. Exogenous GA1 could completely compensate for LD at both 9 and 21°C. Gibberellins A20, A19 and A44 could also partly replace LD, but they were significantly less active than GA1, GA53 was inactive when applied to plants grown at 9°C in SD and exhibited only marginal activity at 9°C LD and 21°C SD. The total level of GAs of the early 13-hydroxylation pathway (A53, A44, A19, A20 and A1) increased rapidly when plants were transferred from SD to LD at 9°C. After transfer from 9 to 21°C, there was an increase in GA levels at both LD and SD, followed by a decrease under LD conditions. In all cases, GA19 was the predominant GA, accounting for 60 to 80% of the analysed GAs. Levels of the bioactive GA1 were low and increased transiently by LD four days after transfer from SD to LD. At both temperatures, the ratio GA19 to GA20 and GA20 to GA1 at 9°C was enhanced by LD compared with SD. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that photoperiodic regulation of leaf elongation in Poa pratensis is GA-mediated, and they indicate a photoperiodic control of oxidation of GA53 to GA44 and GA19 to GA20, and perhaps also of 3β-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1.  相似文献   

5.
Maki SL  Brenner ML 《Plant physiology》1991,97(4):1359-1366
Gibberellins (GAs) are either required for, or at least promote, the growth of the pea (Pisum sativum L.) fruit. Whether the pericarp of the pea fruit produces GAs in situ and/or whether GAs are transported into the pericarp from the developing seeds or maternal plant is currently unknown. The objective of this research was to investigate whether the pericarp tissue contains enzymes capable of metabolizing GAs from [14C]GA12-7-aldehyde ([14C]GA12ald) to biologically active GAs. The metabolism of GAs early in the biosynthetic pathway, [14C]GA12 and [14C]GA12ald, was investigated in pericarp tissue isolated from 4-day-old pea fruits. [14C]GA12ald was metabolized primarily to [14C]GA12ald-conjugate, [14C]GA12, [14C]GA53, and polar conjugate-like products by isolated pericarp. In contrast, [14C]GA12 was converted primarily to [14C]GA53 and polar conjugate-like products. Upon further investigations with intact 4-day-old fruits on the plant, [14C]GA12 was found to be converted to a product which copurified with endogenous GA20. Lastly, [2H]GA20 and [2H]GA1 were recovered 48 hours after application of [2H]- and [14C]GA53 to pericarp tissue of intact 3-day-old pea fruits. These results demonstrate that pericarp tissue metabolizes GAs and suggests a function for pericarp GA metabolism during fruit growth.  相似文献   

6.
Talon M  Zeevaart JA 《Plant physiology》1990,92(4):1094-1100
Stem growth and flowering in the long-day plant Silene armeria L. are induced by exposure to a minimum of 3 to 6 long days (LD). Stem growth continues in subsequent short days (SD), albeit at a reduced rate. The growth retardant tetcyclacis inhibited stem elongation induced by LD, but had no effect on flowering. This indicates that photoperiodic control of stem growth in Silene is mediated by gibberellins (GA). The objective of this study was to analyze the effects of photoperiod on the levels and distribution of endogenous GAs in Silene and to determine the nature of the photoperiodic after-effect on stem growth in this plant. The GAs identified in extracts from Silene by full-scan combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), GA12, GA53, GA44, GA17, GA19, GA20, GA1, GA29, and GA8, are members of the early 13-hydroxylation pathway. All of these GAs were present in plants under SD as well as under LD conditions. The GA53 level was highest in plants in SD, and decreased in plants transferred to LD conditions. By contrast, GA19, GA20, and GA1 initially increased in plants transferred to LD, and then declined. Likewise, when Silene plants were returned from LD to SD, there was an increase in GA53, and a decrease in GA19, GA20, and GA1 which ultimately reached levels similar to those found in plants kept in SD. Thus, measurements of GA levels in whole shoots of Silene as well as in individual parts of the plant suggest that the photoperiod modulates GA metabolism mainly through the rate of conversion of GA53. As a result of LD induction, GA1 accumulates at its highest level in shoot tips which, in turn, results in stem elongation. In addition, LD also appear to increase the sensitivity of the tissue to GA, and this effect is presumably responsible for the photoperiodic after-effect on stem elongation in Silene.  相似文献   

7.
Theodor Lange 《Planta》1994,195(1):108-115
Gibberellin (GA) 20-oxidase was purified to apparent homogeneity from Cucurbita maxima endosperm by fractionated ammonium-sulphate precipitation, gel-filtration chromatography and anion-exchange and hydrophobic-interaction high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Average purification after the last step was 55-fold with 3.9% of the activity recovered. The purest single fraction was enriched 101-fold with 0.2% overall recovery. Apparent relative molecular mass of the enzyme was 45 kDa, as determined by gel-filtration HPLC and sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that GA 20-oxidase is probably a monomeric enzyme. The purified enzyme degraded on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, giving two protein spots: a major one corresponding to a molecular mass of 30 kDa and a minor one at 45 kDa. The isoelectric point for both was 5.4. The amino-acid sequences of the amino-terminus of the purified enzyme and of two peptides from a tryptic digest were determined. The purified enzyme catalysed the sequential conversion of [14C]GA12 to [14C]GA15, [14C]GA24 and [14C]GA25, showing that carbon atom 20 was oxidised to the corresponding alcohol, aldehyde and carboxylic acid in three consecutive reactions. [14C]Gibberellin A53 was similarly converted to [14C]GA44, [14C]GA19, [14C]GA17 and small amounts of a fourth product, which was preliminarily identified as [14C]GA20, a C19-gibberellin. All GAs except [14C]GA20 were identified by combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The cofactor requirements in the absence of dithiothreitol were essentially as in its presence (Lange et. al, Planta 195, 98–107, 1994), except that ascorbate was essential for enzyme activity and the optimal concentration of catalase was lower.  相似文献   

8.
Experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that the labeled products recovered from plant tissue incubated with [14C]GA12-7-aldehyde ([14C]GA12ald) would serve as appropriate [14C]markers for the recovery of naturally-occurring gibberellins (GAs). The [14C]GA12ald (about 200 millicuries per millimole) was synthesized from pumpkin endosperm using [4,5-14C]mevalonic acid. It was added to the adaxial surface of isolated pea cotyledons at 22 days after flowering. Products recovered after 0.5 and 4.0 hour incubations yielded four major peaks which were separated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). These products were purified by multiple-column HPLC using on-line radioactivity detection. They were then added as [14C]markers to two unlabeled pea extracts. In general, preparative HPLC followed by further HPLC purification resulted in a single UV-absorbing peak co-eluting with each [14C]marker. These [14C] and UV-absorbing peaks were shown to contain GA53, GA44, GA20, GA19, and GA17 by GC-MS. The finding of GA53 is novel; all others have previously been found in pea. Endogenous GAs of pea were thus readily detected using [14C]GA12ald metabolites as [14C]markers to recover naturally occurring GAs suggesting that the method may be applicable in detecting naturally occurring GAs in other species.  相似文献   

9.
Stem elongation and flowering are two processes induced by long-day (LD) treatment in Silene armeria L. Whereas photoperiodic control of stem growth is mediated by gibberellins (GAs), the flowering response cannot be obtained by GA applications. Microscopic observations on early cellular changes in the shoot meristem following LD induction or GA treatment in short days (SD) were combined with GA analyses of stem sections at various distances below the shoot apex. The earliest effects of both LD and GA induction on the subapical meristem were an increase in the number of cells per cell file and a reduction of cell length in the meristematic tissue approx. 1.0–3.0 mm below the shoot apex. Within 8 d after the beginning of LD induction or after GA application, the cells in the subapical meristem were oriented in long files. In induced tips, cellulose deposition occurred mostly in longitudinal walls, indicating that many transverse cell divisions had taken place which, in turn, increased the length of the stem. In contrast to LD induction, GA treatments did not promote the transition from the vegetative to the floral stage. Endogenous GAs were analyzed by selected ion monitoring (SIM), using labeled internal standards, in extracts from transverse sections of the tip at various distances below the apical meristem. In control plants, the levels of the six 13-hydroxy GAs studied (GA53, GA44, GA19, GA20, GA1, and GA8) decreased as the distance from the apical meristem increased. Except for GA53, GA levels were higher in tips of LD-induced plants, particularly in the meristematic zone approx. 0.5–1.5 mm below the apical meristem. In comparison with SD, the highest increase observed was for GA1, the content of which increased 30-fold in the zone 0.5–3.5 mm below the shoot apex. These data indicate a spatial correlation between the accumulation of GA1 and its precursors, and the enhanced mitotic activity which occurs in the subapical meristem of elongating Silene apices.Abbreviations GAn gibberellin An - LD long day(s) - SD short day(s) We thank Dr. L.N. Mander, Australian National University, Canberra, for providing [2H]- gibberellins, Dr. B.O. Phinney, University of California, Los Angeles, USA, for [13C]GA8, Dr. D.A. Gage, MSU-NIH Mass Spectrometry Facility, for advice with mass spectrometry, and Mr. M. Chassagne, I.N.R.A. C.R. Bordeaux, for the photography. This work was supported, in part, by a fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture (Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agrarias) to M.T., by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-ACO2-76ERO-1338, and by the U.S. Department of Agriculture grant No. 88-37261-3434 to J.A.D.Z.  相似文献   

10.
Seed effects on gibberellin metabolism in pea pericarp   总被引:1,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Pea fruit (Pisum sativum L.) is a model system for studying the effect of seeds on fruit growth in order to understand coordination of organ development. The metabolism of 14C-labeled gibberellin A12 (GA12) by pea pericarp was followed using a method that allows access to the seeds while maintaining pericarp growth in situ. Identification and quantitation of GAs in pea pericarp was accomplished by combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry following extensive purification of the putative GAs. Here we report for the first time that the metabolism of [14C]GA12 to [14C]GA19 and [14C]GA20 occurs in pericarp of seeded pea fruit. Removal of seeds from the pericarp inhibited the conversion of radiolabeled GA19 to GA20 and caused the accumulation of radiolabeled and endogenous GA19. Deseeded pericarp contained no detectable GA20, GA1, or GA8, whereas pericarp with seeds contained endogenous and radiolabeled GA20 and endogenous GA1. These data strongly suggest that seeds are required for normal GA biosynthesis in the pericarp, specifically the conversion of GA19 to GA20.  相似文献   

11.
To interpret the metabolism of radiolabeled gibberellins A12-aldehyde and A12 in shoots of pea (Pisum sativum L.), the identity of the radiolabeled peaks has to be determined and the endogenous presence of the gibberellins demonstrated. High specific activity [14C]GA12 and [14C]GA12-aldehyde were synthesized using a pumpkin endosperm enzyme preparation, and purified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). [14C]GA12 was supplied to upper shoots of pea, line G2, to produce radiolabeled metabolites on the 13-OH pathway. Endogenous compounds copurifying with the [14C]GAs on HPLC were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The endogenous presence of GA53, GA44, GA19 and GA20 was demonstrated and their HPLC peak identity ascertained. The 14C was progressively diluted in GAs further down the pathway, proportional to the levels found in the tissue and inversely proportional to the speed of metabolism, ranging from 63% in GA53 to 4% in GA20. Calculated levels of GA20, GA19, GA44, and GA53 were 42, 8, 10, and 0.5 nanograms/gram, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
The following seven gibberellins (GAs) have been identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in shoots and leaves of the long-day plant Agrostemma githago: GA53, GA44, GA19, GA17, GA20, GA1, and 3-epi-GA1. The levels of these compounds were measured, using selected ion monitoring, during photoperiodic induction. The levels of GA44, GA19, GA17, and GA20 all increased to a peak at eight long days (LD), followed by a decline, while the levels of GA1 and 3-epi-GA1 did not reach a peak until 12 LD. The level of GA53 remained steady over the first 10–12 LD. Later in the LD treatment the levels of GA53, GA44, GA19, and GA17 increased again. The rate of metabolism of all GAs except GA53 was higher after 12–16 LD than under short days. These data thus provide indirect evidence for an effect of photoperiodic induction on GA turnover in A. githago.Abbreviations AMO-1618 2-isopropyl-4-dimethylamino-5-methylphenyl-1-piperidine-carboxylate methyl chloride - GA(s) gibberellin(s) - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - LD long day(s) - MeTMS trimethylsilylether of the methyl ester - SD short day(s) - SIM selected ion monitoring  相似文献   

13.
The level of gibberellin(GA)-like material in cotyledons of soybean (Glycine max L.) was highest at mid-pod fill—about 10 nanograms GA3 equivalents per gram fresh weight of tissue, assayed in the immersion dwarf rice bioassay. This amount is about 1000-fold less than levels in Pisum and Phaseolus seed, other legume species whose spectrum of endogenous gibberellins (GAs) is well known. The metabolism of [14C]-GA12-7-aldehyde (GA12ald)—the universal GA precursor—by intact, mid-pod-fill, soybean cotyledons and their cell-free extracts was investigated. In 4 hours, extracts converted GA12ald to two products—[14C]GA12 (42% yield) and [14C]GA15 (7%). Within 5 minutes, intact embryos converted GA12ald to [14C]GA12 and [14C]GA15 in 15% yield; 4 hour incubations afforded at least 22 products (96% total yield). The putative [14C]GA12 was identified as a product of [14C]GA12ald metabolism on the basis of co-chromatography with authentic GA12 on a series of reversed and normal phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and thin-layer chromatography (TLC) systems, and by a dual feed of the putative [14C]GA12 and authentic [14C]GA12 to cotyledons of both peas and soybeans. The [14C]GA15 was identified as a metabolite of [14C]GA12ald by capillary gas chromatography (GC)-mass-spectrometry-selected ion monitoring, GC-radiocounting, HPLC, and TLC. By adding the [14C] metabolites of [14C]GA12ald to a different and larger extract (about 0.2 kg fresh weight of soybean reproductive tissue) and purifying endogenous substances co-chromatographing with these metabolites, at least two GA-like substances were obtained and one identified as GA7 by GC-mass spectrometry. Since [14C]GA9 was not found as a [14C]metabolite of [14C]GA12ald, soybean embryos might have a pathway for biosynthesis of active, C-19 gibberellins like that of the cucurbits; GA12ald → GA12 → GA15 → GA24 → GA36 → GA4 → GA7.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of photoperiod on the metabolism of GA20 in Salix pentandra was studied by feeding [3H]-GA20 to seedlings which had been grown previously under long day (LD) or short day (SD) conditions. After 48 h in LD or SD, metabolites were separated on sequential, silica gel partition columns and reversed-phase C18 HPLC. The principal metabolite co-chromatographed with [3H]-GA1 and this conversion was confirmed by feeding [2H]-GA20, which was converted to [2H]-GA1 as identified by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring. Chromatographic evidence also indicated the minor conversion of [3H]-GA20 to [3H]-GA8 (via [3H]-GA1) and trace conversion to [3H]-GA29 (GAs A1.8,20.29 are native in Salix). Ethyl acetate-insoluble [3H] metabolites were formed and could be cleaved by cellulase to release putative [3H]-GA20 and [3H]-GA1 suggesting the conversion to glucosyl conjugates of these GAs. Metabolism of [3H]-GA20 was slightly more rapid in plants previously grown under LD than SD, an effect which reflected the generally increased shoot growth under LD. However, altering the photoperiod after [3H]-GA20 addition had only a slight effect on the metabolism of [3H]-GA20 in Salix seedlings. This indicates that the conversion of GA20 to GA1 is not a controlling step in the photoperiodic regulation of growth cessation in Salix.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of the Na and Le genes in peas on gibberellin (GA) levels and metabolism were examined by gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric analysis of extracts from a range of stem-length genotypes fed with [13C, 3H]GA20. The substrate was metabolised to [13C, 3H]GA1, [13C, 3H]GA8 and [13C, 3H]GA29 in the immature, expanding apical tissue of all genotypes carrying Le. In contrast, [13C, 3H]GA29 and, in one line, [13C, 3H]GA29-catabolite, were the only products detected in plants homozygous for the le gene. These results confirm that the Le gene in peas controls the 3-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1. Qualitatively the same results were obtained irrespective of the genotype at the Na locus. In all Na lines the [13C, 3H]GA20 metabolites were considerably diluted by endogenous [12C]GAs, implying that the metabolism of [13C, 3H]GA20 mirrored that of endogenous [12C]GA20. In contrast, the [13C, 3H]GA20 metabolites in na lines showed no dilution with [12C]GAs, confirming that the na mutation prevents the production of C19-GAs. Estimates of the levels of endogenous GAs in the apical tissues of Na lines, made from the 12C:13C isotope ratios and the radioactivity recovered in respective metabolites, varied between 7 and 40 ng of each GA per plant in the tissue expanded during the 5 d between treatment with [13C, 3H]GA20 and extraction. No [12C]GA1 and only traces of [12C]GA8 (in one line) were detected in the two Na le lines examined. These results are discussed in relation to recent observations on dwarfism in rice and maize.Abbreviations GAn gibberellin An - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - HPLC high-pressure liquid chromatography  相似文献   

16.
Evidence has been reported that bulb development in onion plants (Allium cepa L.) is controlled by endogenous bulbing and anti-bulbing hormones, and that gibberellin (GA) is a candidate for anti-bulbing hormone (ABH). In this study, we identified a series of C-13-H GAs (GA12, GA15, GA24, GA9, GA4, GA34, and 3-epi-GA4) and a series of C-13-OH GAs (GA44, GA20, GA1 and GA8) from the leaf sheaths including the lower part of leaf blades of onion plants (cv. Senshu-Chuko). These results suggested that two independent GA biosynthetic pathways, the early-non-hydroxylation pathway to GA4 (active GA) and early-13-hydroxylation pathway to GA1 (active GA), exist in onion plants. It was also suggested that GA4 and GA1 have almost the same ability to inhibit bulb development in onion plants induced by treatment with an inhibitor of GA biosynthesis, uniconazole-P. The endogenous levels of GA1 and GA4, and their direct precursors, GA20 and GA9, in leaf blades, leaf sheaths, and roots of 4-week-old bulbing and non-bulbing onion plants were measured by gas chromatography/selected ion monitoring with the corresponding [2H]labeled GAs as internal standards. In most cases, the GA levels in long-day (LD)-grown bulbing onion plants were higher than those of short-day (SD)-grown non-bulbing onion plants, but the GA1 level in leaf blades of SD-grown onion plants was rather higher than that of LD-grown onion plants. Relationship between the endogenous GAs and bulb development in onion plants is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of an interstock of the dwarfing cultivar M9 and the nondwarfing cultivar MM115 on the distribution and metabolism of labeled gibberellic acid A4 ([3H]GA4) of high specific radioactivity (5.18 × 1010 becquerel per millimole) applied to the xylem of the rootstock in grafted apple (Malus × domestica Borkh.) trees was compared. Free [3H] GA-like metabolites of [3H]GA4, including putative GA1, GA2, GA3, and GA34, as well as various 3H-putative GA glucosyl conjugates were detected in stem segments from both cultivars. M9 interstocks reduced the total uptake of [3H]GA4 and decreased the proportion of 3H metabolites transported to the shoots and leaves of scions. The M9 interstock tissue and adjacent rootstock and scion tissue retained a much greater amount and a higher proportion of the label than did comparable tissue of the nondwarfing MM115 interstock. In addition, the amount and proportion of free [3H]GAs was higher, and the proportion of putative [3H]GA glucosyl conjugates lower, in M9 interstocks compared to MM115. These effects of the dwarfing interstock on GA distribution and metabolism indicate a significant role for GAs in any satisfactory explanation of the dwarfing mechanism in apple.  相似文献   

18.
A cell-free system prepared from developing seed of runner bean (Phaseolus coccineus L.) converted [14C]gibberellin A12-aldehyde to several products. Thirteen of these were identified by capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry as gibberellin A1 (GA1), GA4, GA5, GA6, GA15, GA17, GA19, GA20, GA24, GA37, GA38, GA44 and GA53-aldehyde, all giving mass spectra with 14C-isotope peaks. GA8 and GA28 were also identified but contained no 14C. All the [14C]GA12-aldehyde metabolites, except GA15, GA24 and GA53-aldehyde, are known endogenous GAs of P. coccineus.Abbreviations GAn gibberellin An - GC-MS combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - HPLC highperformance liquid chromatography - MVA mevalonic acid - S-2 2000-g supernatant  相似文献   

19.
Application experiments have suggested that short‐day‐induced cessation of elongation growth in trees is caused by photoperiodic regulation of the conversion of gibberellin GA19 to GA20. In the present study we examined further the photoperiodic control of GA metabolism in trees with focus on the conversion of GA19 in Salix pentandra, hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × tremuloides) and silver birch (Betula pendula) using [17,17‐2H2]‐GA19 or unlabelled GAs in application studies. GA20 and GA1 were able to restore growth also in hybrid aspen and silver birch under short days (SD), whereas GA19 had no or only a very small activity. Contrary to hybrid aspen and S. pentandra, the activity of GA20 in silver birch was significantly lower than that of GA1. Gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry (GC‐MS) analysis revealed a smaller turnover of [2H2]‐GA19 in SD than in long days (LD) in hybrid aspen. No such difference in turnover of [2H2]‐GA19 was observed in photoperiod‐insensitive hybrid aspen overexpressing PHYA. Application of unlabelled GAs to seedlings of S. pentandra, hybrid aspen and silver birch under SD followed by quantification of metabolites by GC‐MS analysis, showed that applied GA19 was not readily converted to GA20 and GA1. Although the sensitivity to GAs is also known to decrease under SD, the present data are in favour of a photoperiodic regulation of the metabolism of GA19in vivo in the woody species S. pentandra, hybrid aspen and silver birch. The data might also suggest that silver birch differs from S. pentandra and hybrid aspen by exhibiting a possible photoperiodic control also of the conversion of GA20 to GA1.  相似文献   

20.
Satsuma (Citrus unshiu [Mak] Marc.) and Clementine (Citrus reticulata [Hort.] Ex. Tanaka, cv Oroval) are two species of seedless mandarins differing in their tendency to develop parthenocarpic fruits. Satsuma is a male-sterile cultivar that shows a high degree of natural parthenocarpy and a high fruit set. Seedless Clementine varieties are self-incompatible, and in the absence of cross-pollination show a very low ability to set fruit. The gibberellins (GAs) GA53, putative 17-OH-GA53, GA44, GA17, GA19, GA20, GA29, GA1, 3-epi-GA1, GA8, GA24, GA9, and GA4 have been identified from developing fruits of both species by full-scan combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Using selected ion monitoring with [2H2]- and [13C]-labeled internal standards, the levels of GA53, GA44, GA19, GA20, GA1, GA8, GA4, and GA9 were determined in developing ovaries at anthesis and 7 days before and after anthesis, from both species. Except for GA8, levels of the 13-hydroxy-GAs were higher in Satsuma than in Clementine, and these differences were more prominent for developing young fruits. At petal fall, Satsuma had, on a nanograms per gram dry weight basis, higher levels of GA53 (10.4x), GA44 (13.9x), GA19 (3.0x), GA20 (11.2x), and GA1 (2.0x). By contrast, levels of GA8 were always higher in Clementine, whereas levels of GA4 did not differ greatly. Levels of GA9 were very low in both species. At petal fall, fruitlets of Satsuma and Clementine contained 65 and 13 picograms of GA1, respectively. At this time, the application of 25 micrograms of paclobutrazol to fruits increased fruit abscission in both varieties. This effect was reversed by the simultaneous applications of 1 microgram of GA3. GA3 alone improved the set in Clementine (13x), but had little influence on Satsuma. Thus, seedless fruits of the self-incompatible Clementine mandarin may not have adequate GA levels for fruit set. Collectively, these results suggest that endogenous GA content in developing ovaries is the limiting factor controlling the parthenocarpic development of the fruits.  相似文献   

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