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1.
《Phytochemistry》1987,26(9):2485-2488
Endogenous gibberellins (GAs) in Chinese Spring wheat seedlings were isolated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and identified by combined capillary gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring (GC-SIM). Gibberellins A1, A3, A19, A20, A44, and A53 were identified in the shoots, A19 and A20 in the roots. The identification of these 13-hydroxylated GAs demonstrates the presence of the early-13-hydroxylation pathway in wheat seedlings. Based on peak area of total ion response of five characteristic ions by GC-SIM, the approximate levels of GAs in the shoots is GA44 > GA19 > GA1 = GA3 > GA20 for the non-vernalized wheat seedlings, and GA44 > GA19 > GA53 = GA3 > GA1 = GA20 for the vernalized wheat seedlings. The C20 GAs, GA53, GA44 and GA19, are present in shoots of the vernalized (flowering) wheat seedlings at somewhat higher levels than that in the non-vernalized (rapidly growing) wheat seedlings. Approximate levels of the C19 GAs, GA20, GA1 and GA3 were lower in the shoots of the vernalized wheat seedlings than in the non-vernalized wheat seedlings. The conversion of GA19 to GA20 (C20 to C19 GAs) may be a rate-limiting step in the vernalized wheat seedlings.  相似文献   

2.
Gibberellin A1 (GA1), GA3 and GA4 inhibited the sprouting of nondormant bulbils of Chinese yam, Dioscorea opposita, where the effectiveness of the GAs was as follows: GA4>GA1+GA3. Uniconazole and prohexadione, plant growth retardants, promoted the sprouting of half-dormant bulbils. By contrast, these retardants inhibited the sprouting of nondormant bulbils. Gibberellin A3 (GA3) and A4 (GA4) which were applied to the stems of the sprouted bulbils, promoted stem elongation, but GAs applied to the bulbous parts inhibited this process. The effectiveness of the GAs on stem elongation was as follows: GA3+GA4 for the promotion and GA4 > GA3 for the inhibition. Uniconazole applied to the stem inhibited the stem elongation of the sprouted bulbils. These results suggest the possible involvement of endogenous GAs in the induction and maintenance of bulbil dormancy of D. opposita, as well as in the bulbil sprouting and subsequent stem elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Tissue-culture-propagated own-rooted cv. Spartan apple trees (Malus domestica Borkh.) planted in 1979 were treated in 1983 and 1985 via a soil-line trunk drench with the plant growth retardant paclobutrazol [(2RS, 3RS)-1-(4-chlorophenyl)-4.4-dimethyl-2-(1,2, 4-triazol-1-yl) pentan-3-ol]. Seeds of immature fruits from untreated and treated trees were sampled in 1989 ca 75 days after full bloom. After seeds were freeze-dried, gibberellins (GAs) were extracted, purified and fractionated via C18 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Gibberellins A1, A3, A4, A7, A8, A9, A15, A17, A19, A20, A24, A34, A35, A44, A51, A53, A54, A61, A62, A63 and A68 were identified by using C18 HPLC, gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring and Kovats retention indices. Eight of the GAs identified were also quantified by using deuterated internal standards. The paclobutrazol applications caused a 55% reduction of vegetative shoot elongation in 1989, but both treated and untreated trees had developed a biennial bearing pattern by that time (heavy bloom or “on year’in 1989). Levels of early 13-hydroxylation pathway GAs, viz. GA53, GA19, GA20, GA1 and also GA3, were not altered by treatment. However, GA4, GA7 and GA9 were increased 13.4, 6.5 and 3.8 times, respectively, in seeds of fruit from treated compared to untreated trees.  相似文献   

4.
Gibberellins A1 and A3 are the major physiologically active gibberellins (GAs) present in young fruit of pea (Pisum sativum L.). The relative importance of these GAs in controlling fruit growth and their biosynthetic origins were investigated in cv. Alaska. In addition, the non-13-hydroxylated active GAs, GA4 and GA7, were identified for the first time in young seeds harvested 4 d after anthesis, although they are minor components and are not expected to play major physiological roles. The GA1 content is maximal in seeds and pods at 6 d after anthesis, the time of highest growth-rate of the pod (Garcia-Martinez et al. 1991, Planta 184: 53–60), whereas gibberellic acid (GA3), which is present at high levels in seeds 4–8 d after anthesis, has very low abundance in pods. Gibberellins A19, A20 and A29 are most concentrated in seeds at, or shortly after, anthesis and their abundance declines rapidly with development, concomitant with the sharp increase in GA1 and GA3 content. Application of GA1 or GA3 to the leaf subtending an emasculated flower stimulated parthenocarpic fruit development. Measurement of the GA content of the pods at 4 d after anthesis indicated that only 0.002–0.5% of the applied GA was transported to the fruit, depending on dose. There was a linear relationship between GA1 content and pod weight up to about 2 ng · (g FW)−1, whereas no such correlation existed for GA3 content. The concentration of endogenous GA1 in pods from pollinated ovaries is just sufficient to give the maximum growth response. It is concluded that GA1, but not GA3, controls pod growth in pea; GA3 may be involved in early seed development. The distribution of GAs within the seeds at 4 d post anthesis was also investigated. Most of the GA1, GA8, GA19, GA20 and GA29 was present in the testa, whereas GA3 was distributed equally between testa and endosperm and GA4 was localised mainly in the endosperm. Of the GAs analysed, only GA3 and GA20 were detected in the embryo. Metabolism experiments with intact tissues and cell-free fractions indicated compartmentation of GA biosynthesis within the seed. Using 14C-labelled GA12, GA9, 2,3-didehydroGA9 and GA20 as substrates, the testa was shown to contain 13-hydroxylase and 20-oxidase activities, the endosperm, 3β-hydroxylase and 20-oxidase activities. Both tissues also produced 16,17-dihydrodiols. However, GA1 and GA3 were not obtained as products and it is unlikely that they are formed via the early 13-hydroxylation pathway. [14C]gibberellin A12, applied to the inside surface of pods in situ, was metabolised to GA19, GA20, GA29, GA29-catabolite, GA81 and GA97, but GA1 was not detected. Gibberellin A20 was metabolised by this tissue to GA29 and GA29-catabolite. Received: 23 July 1996 / Accepted: 2 September 1996  相似文献   

5.
Gibberellins (GAs) A17, A19, A20, A29, A44, 2OH-GA44 (tentative) and GA29-catabolite were identified in 21-day-old seeds of Pisum sativum cv. Alaska (tall). These GAs are qualitatively similar to those in the dwarf cultivar Progress No. 9 with the exception of GA19 which does not accumulate in Progress seeds. There was no evidence for the presence of 3-hydroxylated GAs in 21 day-old Alaska seeds. Dark-grown shoots of the cultivar Alaska contein GA1, GA8, GA20, GA29, GA8-catabolite and GA29-catabolite. Dark-grown shoots of the cultivar Progress No.9 contain GA8, GA20, GA29 and GA29-catabolite, and the presence of GA1 was strongly indicated. Quantitation using GAs labelled with stable isotope showed the level of GA1 in dark-grown shoots of the two cultivars to be almost identical, whilst the levels of GA20, GA29 and GA29-catabolite were significantly lower in Alaska than in Progress No. 9. The levels of these GAs in dark-grown shoots were 102- to 103-fold less than the levels in developing seeds. The 2-epimer of GA29 is present in dark-grown-shoot extracts of both cultivars and is not thought to be an artefact.Abbreviations cv cultivar - GAn gibberellin An - GC gas chromatography - GC-MS combined gas chromatographymass spectrometry - HPLC high-pressure liquid chromatography - KRI Kovats retention index - MeTMSi methyl ester trimethylsilyl ether  相似文献   

6.
Gibberellins A1 and A34 (possibly A2) were found as products of metabolism of 1,2-[3H]GA4 during germination of Pinus attenuata pollen. The conversion from GA4 to GA1 and GA34 occurred as hydroxylations at atoms C-13 and C-2 of the ent-gibberellane skeleton, respectively. Percentage interconversion of the GA4 absorbed was in the range of 0.15 to 0.43% for GA1 and 1.54 to 3.22% for GA34. Identifications were made on a gas-liquid chromatograph with radioactive monitoring by comparison with standards.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Carol Moll  Russell L. Jones 《Planta》1981,152(5):442-449
The short-term kinetics of growth of the excised lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) hypocotyl were characterized with respect to the effects of gibberellic acid (GA3), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), KCl and pH. A Hall-device-based, miniaturized, linear displacement transducer was developed to measure the growth of 2-mm hypocotyl sections with 1-m resolution. Following treatment with GA3, a lag time of less than 10 min was typically followed by an increase in growth rate with two acceleration phases, reaching a final elevated rate within about 1 h. The kinetics of the response to GA1, a mixture of GA4 and GA7, and GA9 were similar to the response to GA3. There was no response to IAA treatment either in the presence or absence of GA3. KCl alone had no effect on the growth rate, but caused an increase in rate when added after GA3, with a lag time of usually less than 1 h. Responses to pH changes had lag times of a few minutes in all cases. A shift from H2O to pH 6 buffer inhibited growth, while a shift from H2O to pH 4 buffer resulted in a transient increase to a rate comparable to that induced by GA3. A shift from pH 6 to pH 5 caused an increase in growth rate, followed by a gradual decline to an H2O control rate after more than an hour. The responses to GA3 at pH 4 and pH 5 were similar to that found for addition of GA3 to water controls.Abbreviations GA gibberellin - GA3 gibberellic acid - GA1, GA4+7, GA9 gibberellins A1, A4+7, A9 - IAA indole-3-acetic acid  相似文献   

9.
The biosynthetic steps from gibberellin A12-aldehyde (GA12-aldehyde) to C19-GAs were studied by means of a cell-free system from the embryos of immature Phaseolus vulgaris seeds. Stable-isotope-labeled GAs were used as substrates and the products were identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Gibberellin A12-aldehyde was converted to GA4 via non-hydroxylated intermediates and to GA1 via 13-hydroxylated intermediates. 13-Hydroxylation took place at the beginning of the pathway by the conversion of GA12-aldehyde to GA53-aldehyde. The conversion of GA20 to GA5 and GA6 was also shown but no 2-hydroxylating activity was found. Endogenous GAs from embryos and testas of 17-dold seeds were re-examined by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring using stable-isotopelabeled GAs as internal standards. Gibberellins A9, A12, A15, A19, A23, A24, and A53 were identified for the first time in P. vulgaris, in addition to GA1, GA4, GA5, GA6, GA8, GA17, GA20, GA29, GA37, GA38 and GA44, which were previously known to occur in this species. The levels of all GAs, except the 2-hydroxylated ones, were greater in the embryos than in the testas. Conversely, the contents of GA8 and GA29, both 2-hydroxylated, were much higher in the testas than in the embryos.Abbreviations GAn gibberellin An - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - GC-SIM gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring - HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography - TLC thin-layer chromatography - m/z ion of mass  相似文献   

10.
Cell-free systems were prepared from germinating seed and seedlings of Phaseolus coccineus. Gibberellin A4 (GA4)-metabolising activity was detected in vitro using preparations from roots, shoots and cotyledons of germinating seed, but only up to 24 h after imbibition. Cell-free preparations from cotyledons converted [3H]GA4 to GA1, GA34, GA4-glucosyl ester and a putative O-glucoside of GA34, and, in addition converted [3H]GA1 to GA8. Preparations from embryo tissues contained 2-hydroxylase activity, converting [3H]GA4 to GA34 and [3H]GA1 to GA8.The presence of GA-metabolising enzymes was also indicated by in-vivo feeds of [3H]GA4 to epicotyls of intact 4-d-old seedlings, which resulted in the accumulation of GA1, GA8, GA3-3-O-glucoside, GA4-glucosyl ester, GA8-2-O-glucoside and a putative O-glucoside of GA34. Gibberellin A1 was the first metabolite detected, 15 min after application of [3H]GA4, but after 24 h most of the label was associated with GA8-2-O-glucoside. Over 90% of the recovered radioactivity was found in the shoot. Within the shoot, movement was preferentially acropetal, and was not dependent upon metabolism of the applied [3H]GA4.Abbreviations DEAE diethylaminoethyl - GAn gibberellin An - GPC gel permeation chromatography - HPLC-RC high performance liquid chromatography-radio counting - S-1 1000·g supernatant - UDP uridine 5-diphosphate  相似文献   

11.
The effects of 3-deoxygibberellin C (DGC) on the growth-promoting actions of gibberellins A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, A7, A8, A9, A13, A18, A19, A20, and A23 (GAn) as well as 13-deoxygibberellin A5 (deoxy-GA5) were tested with seedlings of gibberellin-deficient dwarf mutants (d2 and d5) of maize (Zea mays L.). It was found that DGC promoted the actions of gibberellins having both C-1 double bond and C-3 axial hydroxyl group, and it inhibited the action of gibberellins having the saturated ring A and lacking the C-3 axial hydroxyl group, whereas it did not affect that of the ones having the hydroxyl group. The presence of C-2 double bond, as in GA5 and deoxy-GA5, diminished the inhibitory action of DGC. The DGC inhibition was alleviated by raising the doses of the relevant GAs, suggesting that it is a competitive inhibition. These results and the finding that the growth of normal maize and rice seedlings are inhibited by DGC indicate that GA9, GA19, GA20 or other gibberellins having ring A of the same structure are involved in the growth of these plants as active form(s) or as intermediate(s) leading to the active form(s).  相似文献   

12.
Changes in the kind and level of endogenous gibberellins (GAs) in the developing liquid endosperm of tea (Camellia sinensis L.) were investigated. Gibberellin A1 (GA1), GA8, GA19, GA20, and GA44 were identified by GC-MS or GC-SIM. Besides these early C-13 hydroxylated GAs, GA3, iso-GA3, and GA38 were also identified. Of these GAs, GA1 and GA3 were the major gibberellins. The levels of these GAs were at a maximum in the globular embryo stage and then decreased rapidly during embryo maturation.  相似文献   

13.
Gibberellins (GAs) A1, A5, and A29 were identified, and also GA32 was confirmed, as endogenous GAs of immature seeds (3-4 weeks after anthesis, 0.25-0.5 gram fresh weight) of apricot (Prunus armeniaca L.) based on capillary gas chromatography (GC), retention time (Rt), and selected ion monitoring (SIM), in comparison with authentic standards. Fractions subjected to GC-SIM were purified and separated using sequential solvent partitioning → paper chromatography → reverse phase C18 high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) → bioassay on dwarf rice cv Tan-ginbozu. Two other peaks of free GA-like bioactivity (microdrop and immersion dwarf rice assays) were eluted from C18 HPLC at Rts where GA4/7 and GA8 (or other GAs with similar structures) would elute. Also, three unidentified GA glucoside-like compounds (based on bioactivity on the immersion assay, and no bioactivity on the microdrop assay) were noted. There were very high amounts of GA32 (112 ng of GA3 equivalents per gram fresh weight), and minor amounts (0.5 ng of GA3 equivalents) for each of GA1 and GA5, respectively, based on the microdrop assay.  相似文献   

14.
Gibberellin A14-[17-3H] applied to seedlings of dark grown dwarf pea (Pisum sativum L. cy. Meteor) was converted to GA1, GA8, GA18, GA23, GA28, and GA38. The sequence of interconversion of GA14→ GA18 → GA38 → GA23 → GA1 → GA8 is indicated. Identifications were made by gas-liquid radiochromatography using three liquid stationary phases.  相似文献   

15.
Summary When aleurone layers were treated with labeled gibberellin A1 (3H-GA1), gibberellin A5 (3H-GA5) and the methyl ester of 3H-GA5 (3H-GA5-ME), radioactivity was accumulated by the tissue for a period of 20–30 h. After this time, radioactivity was released into the medium. Concomitantly, ribonuclease was also liberated by the tissue. The radioactivity accumulated by aleurone layers was associated with polar metabolites of the respective GAs, and the extent of extent of accumulation was a function of the degree of GA metabolism (GA5-ME>GA5>GA1). Accumulation of radioactivity was inhibited in the cold and by the metabolic poisons NaF and dinitrophenol. This was thought to be due to inbition of GA metabolism. The accumulation of 3H-GA1 in aleurone tissue did not reach saturation when unlabeled GA3 up to 10-2 M was added to the incubation medium.Abbreviations GA gibberellin - GA5 ME, gibberellin A5 methyl ester - RNase ribonuclease  相似文献   

16.
[3H]Gibberellin A1 ([3H]GA1)applied to seedlings of dwarf rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. Tanginbozu) was metabolized to GA8. Identification of GA8, was made by gas-liquid radiochromatography using three liquid stationary phases.  相似文献   

17.
Flower buds of peach (Prunus persica L.) trees, cv Novedad de Cordoba (Argentina), were collected near the end of the dormant period and immediately before anthesis. After removal of scale leaves, morphological observations of representative buds, made on transverse and longitudinal microtome sections, showed that all verticils making up the flower are present in an undifferentiated form during the dormant period (June). Flower buds collected at the end of dormant period (August) showed additional growth and differentiation, at which time formation of two ovules was beginning in the unicarpelar gynoecium. Dehiscence of anthers had not yet occurred 10 days before full bloom, and the ovules were still developing. Free endogenous gibberellin (GA)-like substances were quantified by bioassay (Tan-ginbozu dwarf rice microdrop) after SiO2 partition column chromatography, reversed phase C18-high performance liquid chromatography, and finally Nucleosil [N(CH3)2]high performance liquid chromatography. Bioactive fractions were then subjected to capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion monitoring (GC-MS-SIM). Gibberellins A1, A3, and A8 were tentatively identified in peach flower buds using GC-SIM and Kovat's retention indices, and relative amounts approximated by GC-SIM (2:8:6 for GA1, GA3, and GA8, respectively). The highest concentration (330 nanograms per gram dry weight) of free GA1/GA3 was found in dormant buds (June) and diminished thereafter. The concentration free of GA1/GA3 did not increase immediately prior to bud break. However, high GA1/GA3 concentrations occurred during stages where rate of growth and cellular differentiation of (mainly fertile) verticils can be influenced.  相似文献   

18.
A mutant gene that increases gibberellin production in brassica   总被引:10,自引:7,他引:3  
A single gene mutant (elongated internode [ein/ein]) with accelerated shoot elongation was identified from a rapid cycling line of Brassica rapa. Relative to normal plants, mutant plants had slightly accelerated floral development, greater stem dry weights, and particularly, increased internode and inflorescence elongation. The application of the triazole plant growth retardant, paclobutrazol, inhibited shoot elongation, returning ein to a more normal phenotype. Conversely, exogenous gibberellin A3 (GA3) can convert normal genotypes to a phenotype resembling ein. The content of endogenous GA1 and GA3 were estimated by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring using [2H]GA1, as a quantitative internal standard and at day 14 were 1.5- and 12.1-fold higher per stem, respectively, in ein than in normal plants, although GA concentrations were more similar. The endogenous levels of GA20 and GA1, and the rate of GA19 metabolism were simultaneously analyzed at day 7 by feeding [2H2]GA19 and measuring metabolites [2H2]GA20 and [2H2]GA1 and endogenous GA20 and GA1, with [2H5]GA20 and [2H5]GA1 as quantitative internal standards. Levels of GA1 and GA20 were 4.6- and 12.9-fold higher, respectively, and conversions to GA20 and GA1 were 8.3 and 1.3 times faster in ein than normal plants. Confirming the enhanced rate of GA1 biosynthesis in ein, the conversion of [3H]GA20 to [3H]GA1 was also faster in ein than in the normal genotype. Thus, the ein allele results in accelerated GA1 biosynthesis and an elevated content of endogenous GAs, including the dihydroxylated GAs A1 and A3. The enhanced GA production probably underlies the accelerated shoot growth and development, and particularly, the increased shoot elongation.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Ethephon (Eth), gibberellin A3, A4 + 7 (GA3, GA4 + 7), and 6-benzyladenine (BA) removed secondary dormancy of Amaranthus caudatus seeds. The GAs and BA potentiated the effect of ethephon or 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC), an ethylene biosynthesis precursor, in terms of the rate or final percent of germination. Aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG), an ACC synthase activity inhibitor, was observed to simultaneously inhibit the release from dormancy effected by GA3 or BA as well as the ethylene production stimulated by these regulators. Breaking of secondary dormancy by GA3, GA4 + 7 or BA was prevented by 2,5-norbornadiene (NBD), an inhibitor of ethylene binding. Ethylene completely or markedly reversed the inhibitory effect of NBD. We thus conclude that the removal of secondary dormancy in Amaranthus caudatus seeds by gibberellin or benzyladenine involves ethylene biosynthesis and action.  相似文献   

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