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1.
Singh DP  Jermakow AM  Swain SM 《The Plant cell》2002,14(12):3133-3147
Gibberellins (GAs) are tetracyclic diterpenoids that are essential endogenous regulators of plant growth and development. GA levels within the plant are regulated by a homeostatic mechanism that includes changes in the expression of a family of GA-inactivating enzymes known as GA 2-oxidases. Ectopic expression of a pea GA 2-oxidase2 cDNA caused seed abortion in Arabidopsis, extending and confirming previous observations obtained with GA-deficient mutants of pea, suggesting that GAs have an essential role in seed development. A new physiological role for GAs in pollen tube growth in vivo also has been identified. The growth of pollen tubes carrying the 35S:2ox2 transgene was reduced relative to that of nontransgenic pollen, and this phenotype could be reversed partially by GA application in vitro or by combining with spy-5, a mutation that increases GA response. Treatment of wild-type pollen tubes with an inhibitor of GA biosynthesis in vitro also suggested that GAs are required for normal pollen tube growth. These results extend the known physiological roles of GAs in Arabidopsis development and suggest that GAs are required for normal pollen tube growth, a physiological role for GAs that has not been established previously.  相似文献   

2.
Gibberellins (GAs) A(1), A(3), A(4) and A(7), all 3beta-hydroxylated, growth-active GAs, significantly inhibited shoot elongation and the formation of nodes in in vitro-grown Hancornia speciosa, as did GA(20), a 3-deoxy precursor of GA(1). Ancymidol, an early-stage inhibitor of GA biosynthesis, significantly retarded shoot elongation without affecting the formation of nodes. Co-application of ancymidol and GA(1 )did not overcome the ancymidol-induced growth retardation. Trinexapac-ethyl, which can inhibit 3beta-hydroxylation (GA activation) and 2beta-hydroxylation (GA inactivation), gave no significant response on either shoot elongation or node formation, while two isomers of 16,17-dihydro GA(5), also inhibitors of GA 3beta-hydroxylation, significantly inhibited both shoot growth and the formation of nodes. These unusual results may indicate a unique metabolism for GAs in microcultured shoots of H. speciosa.  相似文献   

3.
The flowering response of three plant species Fuchsia hybrida, Pharbitis nil, and Spathiphyllum "Petite" has been examined after treatment with synthetic and natural gibberellins (GAs) including GA1, GA3, GA5, 2,2-dimethyl GA4, various of their 3a-hydroxyl epimers, the methyl ester of GA3, a 15b-hydroxyl GA3, and some 16,17-dihydro derivatives. Of necessity, application techniques differed between species and dose responses cannot be compared. However, comparisons across species were possible on the basis of their differential responses to the various GAs. Flowering was inhibited and, in an inverse way, stem elongation promoted when GA3 or GA5 was applied to Fuchsia or, at high doses, to Pharbitis. The increased stem growth was apparently responsible for inhibition of flowering because epimerization of the hydroxyl at C-3 of GA3 or modification of GA5 to 16,17-dihydro GA5 created compounds that were growth inactive and that no longer inhibited flowering. However, the response of Pharbitis was more complex because both these GAs and their derivatives promoted flowering at doses subthreshold for growth. For Spathiphyllum, only promotion of flowering was evident with any GA, and the structural variants were slightly active or inactive. Thus, there are at least two antagonistic actions of GA on flowering and for Pharbitis either inhibition or promotion can be shown. The possibility is discussed that the inhibitory action of GA on flowering involves diversion of assimilate away from the shoot apex and into the elongating stem.  相似文献   

4.
The role of gibberellins (GAs) during germination and early seedling growth is examined by following the metabolism and transport of radiolabeled GAs in cotyledon, shoot, and root tissues of pea (Pisum sativum L.) using an aseptic culture system. Mature pea seeds have significant endogenous GA20 levels that fall during germination and early seedling growth, a period when the seedling develops the capacity to transport GA20 from the cotyledon to the shoot and root of the seedling. Even though cotyledons at 0–2 days after imbibition have appreciable amounts of GA20, the cotyledons retain the ability to metabolize labeled GA19 to GA20 and express significant levels of PsGA20ox2 message (which encodes a GA biosynthesis enzyme, GA 20-oxidase). The large pool of cotyledonary GA20 likely provides substrate for GA1 synthesis in the cotyledons during germination, as well as for shoots and roots during early seedling growth. The shoots and roots express GA metabolism genes (PsGA3ox genes which encode GA 3-oxidases for synthesis of bioactive GA1, and PsGA2ox genes which encode GA 2-oxidases for deactivation of GAs to GA29 and GA8), and they develop the capacity to metabolize GAs as necessary for seedling establishment. Auxins also show an interesting pattern during early seedling growth, with higher levels of 4-chloro-indole-3-acetic acid (4-Cl-IAA) in mature seeds and higher levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in young root and shoot tissues. This suggests a changing role for auxins during early seedling development.  相似文献   

5.
Zhou R  Yu M  Pharis RP 《Plant physiology》2004,135(2):1000-1007
Ring D-modified gibberellin (GA) A5 and A20 derivatives are structurally similar to GA20 and GA9 (the precursors to growth-active GA1 and GA4) and, when applied to higher plants, especially grasses, can reduce shoot growth with concomitant reductions in levels of growth-active GAs and increases in levels of their immediate 3-deoxy precursors. The recombinant Arabidopsis GA 3beta-hydroxylase (AtGA3ox1) protein was used in vitro to test a number of ring D-modified GA structures as possible inhibitors of AtGA3ox1. This fusion protein was able to 3beta-hydroxylate the 3-deoxy GAs, GA9 and GA20, to GA4 and GA1, respectively, and convert the 2,3-didehydro GA, GA5, to its 2,3-epoxide, GA6. Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) values of 1.25 and 10 microM, respectively, were obtained for the GA9 and GA20 conversions. We utilized the enzyme's ability to convert GA20 to GA1 in order to test the efficacy of GA5, 16,17-dihydro GA5 (dihydro GA5), and a number of other ring D-modified GAs as inhibitors of AtGA3ox activity. For the exo-isomer of dihydro GA5, inhibition increased with the dose of dihydro GA5, with Lineweaver-Burk plots showing that dihydro GA5 changed only the Km of the enzyme reaction, not the V(max), giving a dissociation constant of the enzyme-inhibitor complex (Ki) of 70 microM. Other ring D-modified GA derivatives showed similar inhibitory effects on GA1 production, with 16,17-dihydro GA20-13-acetate being the most effective inhibitor. This behavior is consistent with dihydro GA5, at least, functioning as a competitive substrate inhibitor of AtGA3ox1. Finally, the recombinant AtGA3ox1 fusion protein may be a useful screening tool for other effective 3beta-hydroxylase inhibitors, including naturally occurring ones.  相似文献   

6.
Applications of the growth promotive gibberellins (GAs) GA4 and 2,2-dimethyl GA4, and of C-16,17 endo-dihydro GA5, which is known to promote flowering while inhibiting stem growth in the long-day grass Lolium temulentum, were made to micropropagated plants of Metrosideros collina cv. Tahiti, a highly ornamental cultivar with an intermittent flowering pattern. Gibberellin A4 and 2,2-dimethyl GA4 stimulated vegetative growth both in elongating shoots, and internodes of shoots developing from buds that were quiescent at the time of GA application. Abscission of the apices of expanding shoots, a feature of mature Metrosideros plants, was inhibited by these GAs, the rejuvenation of micropropagated plantlets being enhanced. However, C-16,17 endo-dihydro GA5 differed from GA4 and 2,2-dimethyl GA4 by having no promotive effects on vegetative growth, and no inhibition of apical abscission. Notwithstanding this contrasting effect on vegetative growth, high doses of GA4 or C-16,17 endo-dihydro GA5 similarly reduced flowering on shoots to which either GA was applied. Reduced flowering in response to applied GAs is common in many woody angiosperms, and in this instance was probably the combined result of abortion of developing floral structures in quiescent buds, and a preferential inhibition of bud break for floral buds relative to vegetative buds, particularly by GA4. Finally, both C-16,17 endo-dihydro GA5 and GA4 strongly inhibited bud break in this woody angiosperm, although GA4 could initially stimulate bud break when applied to vegetative buds close to the expansion stage. The above findings, in toto, highlight the sensitivity of Metrosideros to both classes of GA in a variety of growth and development processes.  相似文献   

7.
Gibberellins (GAs) are a group of diterpenoid plant hormones that control plant growth and development at various stages. Biologically active GAs share the common structures of a 3β-hydroxy group, a carboxy group at C-6, and a γ-lactone between C-4 and C-10. Hydroxylation at C-2β is a major deactivation step in many plant species, and hydroxylation at C-13 has been shown to weaken the binding affinity of GAs to their receptor proteins. In rice, bioactive GA4 has also been shown to be deactivated through 16α,17-epoxidation. Moreover, 16,17-dihydro-16α,17-dihydroxy GA4 has been identified as an aglycon of its glucoside from rice. However, our knowledge on the biological activity of 16,17-epoxidized GAs is currently limited to 16,17-dihydro-16α,17-epoxy GA4. Moreover, the bioactivity of 16,17-dihydro-16α,17-dihydroxy GA4 remains unknown. Here, we synthesized 16,17-epoxidized or dihydroxylated GA derivatives and performed a structure–activity relationship study using rice seedlings. 16,17-Epoxidation of bioactive GA1 and GA4 reduced their activity to promote elongation of rice leaf sheaths. Moreover, 16,17-dihydroxylation significantly decreased the activities of 16,17-dihydro-16α,17-epoxy GAs. These results suggest that GAs are deactivated in a stepwise manner via 16,17-epoxidation and hydrolysis of these epoxy groups.  相似文献   

8.
Seasonal control of flowering often involves leaf sensing of daylength coupled to time measurement and generation and transport of florigenic signals to the shoot apex. We show that transmitted signals in the grass Lolium temulentum may include gibberellins (GAs) and the FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) gene. Within 2 h of starting a florally inductive long day (LD), expression of a 20-oxidase GA biosynthetic gene increases in the leaf; its product, GA(20), then increases 5.7-fold versus short day; its substrate, GA(19), decreases equivalently; and a bioactive product, GA(5), increases 4-fold. A link between flowering, LD, GAs, and GA biosynthesis is shown in three ways: (1) applied GA(19) became florigenic on exposure to LD; (2) expression of LtGA20ox1, an important GA biosynthetic gene, increased in a florally effective LD involving incandescent lamps, but not with noninductive fluorescent lamps; and (3) paclobutrazol, an inhibitor of an early step of GA biosynthesis, blocked flowering, but only if applied before the LD. Expression studies of a 2-oxidase catabolic gene showed no changes favoring a GA increase. Thus, the early LD increase in leaf GA(5) biosynthesis, coupled with subsequent doubling in GA(5) content at the shoot apex, provides a substantial trail of evidence for GA(5) as a LD florigen. LD signaling may also involve transport of FT mRNA or protein because expression of LtFT and LtCONSTANS increased rapidly, substantially (>80-fold for FT), and independently of GA. However, because a LD from fluorescent lamps induced LtFT expression but not flowering, the nature of the light response of FT requires clarification.  相似文献   

9.
To understand the biosynthesis and functional role of gibberellins (GAs) in developing seeds, we isolated Cv20ox, a cDNA clone from watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) that shows significant amino acid homology with GA 20-oxidases. The complementary DNA clone was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein, which oxidized GA(12) at C-20 to the C(19) compound GA(9), a precursor of bioactive GAs. RNA-blot analysis showed that the Cv20ox gene was expressed specifically in developing seeds. The gene was strongly expressed in the integument tissues, and it was also expressed weakly in inner seed tissues. In parthenocarpic fruits induced by 1-(2-chloro-4-pyridyl)-3-phenylurea treatment, the expression pattern of Cv20ox did not change, indicating that the GA 20-oxidase gene is expressed primarily in the maternal cells of developing seeds. The promoter of Cv20ox was isolated and fused to the beta-glucuronidase (GUS) gene. In a transient expression system, beta-glucuronidase staining was detectable only in the integument tissues of developing watermelon seeds.  相似文献   

10.
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that the genes involved in gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis are regulated by bioactive GA levels. With the recent cloning of GA 2-oxidase genes from pea, we investigated whether this homeostatic regulation extends to the genes controlling GA deactivation in this species, utilizing two well-characterized GA-deficient mutants, ls and na and a GA-accumulating mutant, sln. The pea GA 2-oxidases showed feed-forward effects at the mRNA level, while the endogenous levels of GA20, GA29, GA1, and GA8 showed no evidence of feed-forward regulation. Analyses of genomic Southern blots and expressed sequenced tag (EST) databases suggest that other GA 2-oxidases could possibly account for this lack of feed-forward on GA levels.  相似文献   

11.
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13.
Gibberellins are phytohormones that regulate growth and development of plants. Gibberellin homeostasis is maintained by feedback regulation of gibberellin metabolism genes. To understand this regulation, we manipulated the gibberellin pathway in tobacco and studied its effects on the morphological phenotype, gibberellin levels and the expression of endogenous gibberellin metabolism genes. The overexpression of a gibberellin 3-oxidase (biosynthesis gene) in tobacco (3ox-OE) induced slight variations in phenotype and active GA(1) levels, but we also found an increase in GA(8) levels (GA(1) inactivation product) and a conspicuous induction of gibberellin 2-oxidases (catabolism genes; NtGA2ox3 and -5), suggesting an important role for these particular genes in the control of gibberellin homeostasis. The effect of simultaneous overexpression of two biosynthesis genes, a gibberellin 3-oxidase and a gibberellin 20-oxidase (20ox/3ox-OE), on phenotype and gibberellin content suggests that gibberellin 3-oxidases are non-limiting enzymes in tobacco, even in a 20ox-OE background. Moreover, the expression analysis of gibberellin metabolism genes in transgenic plants (3ox-OE, 20ox-OE and hybrid 3ox/20ox-OE), and in response to application of different GA(1) concentrations, showed genes with different gibberellin sensitivity. Gibberellin biosynthesis genes (NtGA20ox1 and NtGA3ox1) are negatively feedback regulated mainly by high gibberellin levels. In contrast, gibberellin catabolism genes which are subject to positive feedback regulation are sensitive to high (NtGA2ox1) or to low (NtGA2ox3 and -5) gibberellin concentrations. These two last GA2ox genes seem to play a predominant role in gibberellin homeostasis under mild gibberellin variations, but not under large gibberellin changes, where the biosynthesis genes GA20ox and GA3ox may be more important.  相似文献   

14.
Extracts of stems of growing shoots of Populus deltoides and P. trichocarpa, and developing capsules of P. deltoides were analysed for gibberellins (GAs) by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The following known GAs were identified by comparison of their Kovats retention indices (KRIs) and mass spectra with those of standards: GA1, GA8, GA9, GA19, GA20, 16 beta,17-dihydro-17-hydroxy GA20, GA23, GA28, GA29, GA34, GA44, and GA97. Several of these have not been previously reported from Populus. In addition, two new GAs were identified as 12 beta-hydroxy GA53 (GA127) and 16 beta,17-dihydro-17-hydroxy GA53 and their structures were confirmed by partial synthesis. Evidence was found of 16,17-dihydro-16,17-dihydroxy GA9, 16,17-dihydro-16,17-dihydroxy GA12, 12-hydroxy GA14, and GA34-catabolite by comparison of mass spectra and KRIs with published data. Several putative GAs (hydroxy- and dihydroxy-GA12-like) were also found. The catabolites of active GAs or of key precursors, hydroxylated at C-2 in stems and either C-2, C-12, C-17, or C-16,17 in capsules, were the major proportion of the GAs.  相似文献   

15.
The theory that bioactive gibberellins (GAs) act as inhibitors of inhibitors of plant growth was based originally on the slender pea (Pisum sativum) mutant (genotype la cry-s), but the molecular nature of this mutant has remained obscure. Here we show that the genes LA and CRY encode DELLA proteins, previously characterized in other species (Arabidopsis [Arabidopsis thaliana] and several grasses) as repressors of growth, which are destabilized by GAs. Mutations la and cry-s encode nonfunctional proteins, accounting for the fact that la cry-s plants are extremely elongated, or slender. We use the la and cry-s mutations to show that in roots, DELLA proteins effectively promote the expression of GA synthesis genes, as well as inhibit elongation. We show also that one of the DELLA-regulated genes is a second member of the pea GA 3-oxidase family, and that this gene appears to play a major role in pea roots.  相似文献   

16.
The SLENDER gene of pea encodes a gibberellin 2-oxidase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
  相似文献   

17.
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19.
Eriksson ME  Moritz T 《Planta》2002,214(6):920-930
Physiologically active gibberellins (GAs) are key regulators of shoot growth in trees. To investigate this mechanism of GA-controlled growth in hybrid aspen, we cloned cDNAs encoding gibberellin 20-oxidase (GA 20-oxidase), a key, highly regulated enzyme in the biosynthesis of GAs. Clones were isolated from leaf and cambium cDNA libraries using probes generated by polymerase chain reaction, based on conserved domains of GA 20-oxidases. Upon expression in Escherichia coli, the GST-fusion protein was shown to oxidise GA12 as well as oxidising the 13-hydroxylated substrate GA53, successively to GA9 and GA20, respectively. The gene PttGA20ox1 was expressed in meristematic cells and growing tissues such as expanding internodes, leaves and roots. The expression was negatively regulated by both GA4 and overexpression of phytochrome A. RNA analysis also showed that the expression was down-regulated in late-expanding leaf tissue in response to short days (SDs). Actively growing tissues such as early elongating internodes, petioles and leaf blades had the highest levels of C19-GAs. Upon transfer to SDs an accumulation of GA19 was observed in early elongating internodes and leaf blades. The levels of C19-GAs were also to some extent changed upon transfer to SDs. The levels of GA20 were down-regulated in internodes, and those of GA1 were significantly reduced in early expanding leaf blades. In roots the metabolites GA19 and GA8 decreased upon shifts to SDs, while GA20 accumulated slightly. The down-regulation of GA 20-oxidase activity in response to SDs was further indicated by studies of [14C]GA12 metabolism in shoots, demonstrating that the substrate for GA 20-oxidase, [14C]GA53, accumulates in SDs.  相似文献   

20.
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