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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
In G2 peas (Pisum sativum L.) apical senescence occurs only in long days (LD), and indeterminate growth is associated with elevated gibberellin (GA) levels in the shoot in short days (SD). Metabolism of GA12 aldehyde was investigated by feeding shoots grown in SD or LD with [14C]GA12 aldehyde through the cut end of the stem for 0.5 to 6 hours in the light and analyzing the tissue extract by high performance liquid chromatography. More radioactive products were detected than can be accounted for by the two GA metabolic pathways previously known to be present in peas. Three of the major products appear to be GA conjugates, but an additional pathway(s) of GA metabolism may be present. The levels of putative C20 GAs, [14C]GA53, [14C]GA44, [14C]GA19, and/or [14C] GA17, were all elevated in SD as compared to LD. Putative [14C]GA, was slightly higher in LD than in SD. Putative [14C]GA53 was a major metabolite after 30 minutes of treatment in SD but had declined after longer treatment times to be replaced by elevated levels of putative [14C] GA44 and [14C]GA19/17. Metabolism of GA20 was slow in both photoperiods. Although GA20 and GA19 are the major endogenous GAs as determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, putative [14C]GA20 and [14C]GA19 were never major products of [14C]GA12 aldehyde metabolism. Thus, photoperiod acts in G2 peas to change the rate of GA53 production from GA12 aldehyde, with the levels of the subsequent GAs on the 13-OH pathway being determined by the amount of GA53 being produced.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
[3H]gibberellin A9 was applied to shoots or seed parts of G2 pea to produce radiolabeled metabolites. These were used as markers during purification for the recovery of endogenous GA9 and its naturally occurring metabolites. GA9 and its metabolites were purified by HPLC, derivatized and examined by GC-MS. Endogenous GA9, GA20, GA29 and GA51 were identified in pea shoots and seed coats. GA51-catabolite and GA29-catabolite were also detected in seed coats. GA70 was detected in seed coats following the application of 1 g of GA9. Applied [3H]GA9 was metabolized through both the 13-hydroxylation and 2-hydroxylation pathways. Labeled metabolites were tentatively identified on the basis of co-chromatography on HPLC with endogenous compounds identified by GC-MS. In shoots [3H]GA51 and [3H]GA51-catabolite were the predominant metabolites after 6 hrs, but by 24 hrs there was little of these metabolites remaining, while [3H]GA29-catabolite and an unidentified metabolite predominated. In seed coats [3H]GA51 was the initial product, later followed by [3H]GA51-catabolite and an unidentified metabolite (different from that in shoots), with lesser amounts of [3H]GA20, [3H]GA29 and [3H]GA29-catabolite. [3H]GA70 was a very minor product in both cases. [3H]GA9 was not metabolized by pea cotyledons.Edited by T.J. Gianfagna.Author for correspondence  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Immature seeds of apricot (Prunus armeniaca L.) were fed the native gibberellin A5 (GA5) as 1- and 1,2-[3H]GA5 (5.3 Curies per millimole to 16 milliCuries per millimole) at doses (42 nanograms to 10.6 micrograms per seed) 2 to 530 times the expected endogenous level. After 4 days of incubation, seeds were extracted and free [3H]GA-like metabolites were separated from the highly H2O-soluble [3H]metabolites. For high specific activity feeds the retention times (Rts) of radioactive peaks were compared with Rts of authentic GAs on sequential gradient-eluted → isocratic eluted reversed-phase C18 high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) -radiocounting (RC). From high substrate feeds (530 and 230 × expected endogenous levels) HPLC-RC peak groupings were subjected to capillary gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring (GC-SIM), usually six characteristic ions. The major free GA metabolites of [3H] GA5 were identified as GA1, GA3, and GA6 by GC-SIM. The major highly water soluble metabolite of [3H]GA5 at all levels of substrate GA5 had chromatographic characteristics similar to authentic GA1-glucosyl ester. Expressed as a percentage of recovered radioactivity, low substrate [3H]GA5 feeds (2 × expected endogenous level) yielded a broad spectrum of metabolites eluting at the Rts where GA1, GA3, GA5 methyl ester, GA6, GA22, GA29 (17, 14, 1.6, 7, 1.1, 0.5%, respectively) and GA glucosyl conjugates of GA1, GA3, GA5, and GA8 (33, 11, 1, 0.1%, respectively) elute. Metabolites were also present at Rts where GA glucosyl conjugates of GA6 and GA29 would be expected to elute (8 and 0.1%, respectively). Only 5% of the radioactivity remained as GA5. Increasing substrate GA5 levels increased the proportion of metabolites with HPLC Rts similar to GA1, GA6, and especially GA1 glucosyl ester, primarily at the expense of metabolites with HPLC Rts similar to GA3, GA3-glucosyl ester, and a postulated conjugate of GA6. There was evidence that high doses of substrate GA5 induced new metabolites which often, but not always, differed from GA1, GA3, and GA6 in HPLC Rt. These same metabolites, when analyzed by GC-SIM yielded m/e ions the same as the M+ and other characteristic m/e ions of the above GAs, albeit at differing GC Rt and relative intensities.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of Auxin Transport Inhibitors on Gibberellins in Pea   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The effects of the auxin transport inhibitors 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA), 9-hydroxyfluorene-9-carboxylic acid (HFCA), and 1-N-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) on gibberellins (GAs) in the garden pea (Pisum sativum L.) were studied. Application of these compounds to elongating internodes of intact wild type plants reduced markedly the endogenous level of the bioactive gibberellin A1 (GA1) below the application site. Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) levels were also reduced, as was internode elongation. The auxin transport inhibitors did not affect the level of endogenous GA1 above the application site markedly, nor that of GA1 precursors above or below it. When plants were treated with [13C,3H]GA20, TIBA reduced dramatically the level of [13C,3H]GA1 recovered below the TIBA application site. The internodes treated with auxin transport inhibitors appeared to be still in the phase where endogenous GA1 affects elongation, as indicated by the strong response to applied GA1 by internodes of a GA1-deficient line at the same stage of expansion. On the basis of the present results it is suggested that caution be exercised when attributing the developmental effects of auxin transport inhibitors to changes in IAA level alone. Received April 13, 1998; accepted April 14, 1998  相似文献   

14.
The endogenous gibberellins (GAs) from shoots of the GA-insensitive mutant,gai, ofArabidopsis thaliana were analyzed and compared with the GAs from the Landsberg erecta (Ler) line. Twenty GAs were identified in Ler plants by full-scan gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and Kovats retention indices (KRI's). These GAs are members of the early-13-hydroxylation pathway (GA53, GA44, GA19, GA17, GA20, GA1, GA29, and GA8), the non-3,13-hydroxylation pathway (GA12, GA15, GA24, GA25, GA9, and GA51), and the early-3-hydroxylation pathway (GA37, GA27, GA36, GA13, GA4, and GA34). The same GAs, except GA53, GA44, GA37, and GA29 were detected in thegai mutant by the same methods. In addition, extracts fromgai plants contained GA41 and GA71. Both lines also contained several unknown GAs. In Ler plants these were mainly hydroxy-GA12 derivatives, whereas in thegai mutant hydroxy-GA24, hydroxy-GA25, and hydroxy-GA9 compounds were detected. Quantification of seven GAs by GC-selected ion monitoring (SIM), using internal standards, and comparisons of the ion intensities in the SIM chromatograms of the other thirteen GAs, demonstrated that thegai mutant had reduced levels of all C20-dicarboxylic acids (GA53, GA44, GA19, GA12, GA15, GA24, GA37, GA27, and GA36). In contrast,gai plants had increased levels of C20-tricarboxylic acid GAs (GA17, GA25, and GA41) and of all C19-GAs (GA20, GA1, GA8, GA9, GA51, GA4, GA34, and GA71) except GA29. The 3β-hydroxylated GAs, GA1 and GA4, and their respective 2β-hydroxylated derivatives, GA8 and GA34, were the most abundant GAs found in shoots of thegai mutant. Thus, thegai mutation inArabidopsis results in a phenotype that resembles GA-deficient mutants, is insensitive to both applied and endogenous GAs, and contains low levels of C20-dicarboxylic acid GAs and high levels of C19-GAs. This indicates that theGAI gene controls a step beyond the synthesis of an active GA. Thegai mutant is presumably a GA-receptor mutant or a mutant with a block in the transduction pathway between the receptor and stem elongation. 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, and Dr. D.A. Gage, MSU-NIH Mass Spectrometry Facility (grant No. DRR00480), for advice with mass spectrometry. This work was supported by a fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture (I.N.I.A.) to M.T., by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract DE-ACO2-76ERO-1338, and by U.S. Department of Agriculture grant No. 88-37261-3434 to J.A.D.Z.  相似文献   

15.
The native hormones from tassels of maize (Zea mays) were re-investigated. The previous identification by GC/SIM of GA1, GA8 and GA29 in normal tassels was confirmed by full GC/MS scans at the correct Kovats retention indices. In tassels of dwarf-1 mutants, GA44,?GA19, GA17, GA20 and the 16,17-dihydro, 7β,16α,17-trihydroxy derivative of ent-kaurenoic acid were identified by GC/MS. Gibberellin A1 was not found in the mutant tassels. [14C]Gibberellin A53 was fed to tassels of the dwarf-5 mutant. In the ethyl acetate-soluble acidic fraction from the feeds, [14C]GA44 was identified by GC/MS; [14C]GA19 and [14C]GA29 were identified by GC/SIM. The GA29 is probably a metabolite of the feeds because the dwarf-5 mutant is known to control the step copalyl pyrophosphate to ent-kaurene in the maize GA-biosynthetic pathway and because GA29 was not identified in a control experiment. The n-butanol fractions obtained from the feeds were shown, by GC/MS, to contain [14C]GA53 after hydrolysis, suggesting that conjugated [14C]GA53 is a major metabolite from GA53 feeds. [17-13C, 17-3H2]Gibberellin A20 was fed to normal, dwarf-1 and dwarf-5 tassels. In each case, analysis of the purified ethyl acetate-soluble acidic extracts by GC/MS led to the identification of [13C]GA29 and unmetabolized [13C]GA20 in which no 13C-isotope dilution was observed.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Biosynthesis of gibberellins (GAs) was studied in vivo in endosperms of Sechium edule Sw. Exogenous ent-[14C]kaurene was metabolized into four major products: GA12, GA4, GA7 and 16, 17-dihydro-16-hydroxy-GA15 alcohol glucoside. Other minor metabolites were also observed including ent-kaurenol and ent-kaurenal. Conversion of ent-[14C]kaurene to ent-kaurenol glucoside by endosperm cell-free preparations in the presence of UDPG was observed. However, the finding was not confirmed in in vivo studies and is probably artifactual. Overall evidence coming from the analysis of endogenous GAs and in vitro and in vivo biosynthetic studies are discussed in relation to the possible existence in the Sechium seeds of a different route, along with the known pathway, branching from ent-kaurene or ent-7-α-hydroxykaurenoic acid and this also leading to biologically active GAs.  相似文献   

18.
The application of gibberellin A4/7 (GA4/7) to the stem of previous-year (1-year-old) terminal shoots of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) seedlings has been observed to stimulate cambial growth locally, as well as at a distance in the distal current-year terminal shoot, but the distribution and metabolic fate of the applied GA4/7, as well as the pathway of endogenous GA biosynthesis in this species, has not been investigated. As a first step, we analysed for endogenous GAs and monitored the transport and metabolism of labelled GAs 4, 9 and 20. Endogenous GAs from the elongating current-year terminal shoot of 2-year-old seedlings were purified by column chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography and analysed by combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). GAs 1, 3, 4, 9, 12 and 20 were identified in the stem, and GAs 1, 3 and 4 in the needles, by full-scan mass spectrometry (GAs 1, 3, 4, 9 and 12) or selected-ion monitoring (GA20) and Kovats retention index. Tritiated and deuterated GA4, GA9 or GA20 were applied around the circumference at the midpoint of the previous-year terminal shoot, and metabolites were extracted from the elongating current-year terminal shoot, the application point, and the 1-year-old needles and the cambial region above and below the application point. After purification, detection by liquid scintillation spectrometry and analysis by GC-MS, it was evident that, for each applied GA, unmetabolised [2H2]GA and [3H]radioactivity were present in every seedling part analysed. Most of the radioactivity was retained at the application point when [3H]GA9 and [3H]GA20 were applied, whereas the largest percentage of radioactivity derived from [3H]GA4 was recovered in the current-year terminal shoot. It was also found that [2H2]GA9 was converted to [2H2]GA20 and to both [2H2]GA4 and [2H2]GA1, [2H2]GA4 was metabolised to [2H2]GA1, and [2H2]GA20 was converted to [2H2]GA29. The data indicate that for Pinus sylvestris shoots (1) GAs applied laterally to the outside of the vascular system of previous-year shoots not only are absorbed and translocated extensively throughout the previous-year and current-year shoots, but also are readily metabolised, (2) the GA metabolic pathways found are closely related to the endogenous GAs identified, and (3) GA9 metabolism follows two distinctly different routes: in one, GA9 is converted to GA1 through GA4, and in the other it is converted to GA20, which is then metabolised to GA29. The results suggest that the late 13-hydroxylation pathway is an important route for GA biosynthesis in shoots of Pinus sylvestris, and that the stimulation of cambial growth in Scots pine by exogenous GA4/7 may be due to its conversion to GA1, rather than to it being active per se.  相似文献   

19.
The potential for gibberellins (GAs) to control stem elongation and itsplasticity (range of phenotypic expression) was investigated inStellaria longipes grown in long warm days. Gibberellinmetabolism and sensitivity was compared between a slow-growing alpine dwarfwithlow stem elongation plasticity and a rapidly elongating, highly plastic prairieecotype. Both ecotypes elongated in response to exogenous GA1,GA4 or GA9, but surprisingly, the alpine dwarf wasrelatively unresponsive to GA3. Endogenous GA1,GA3, GA4, GA5, GA8, GA9and GA20 were identified and quantified in stem tissue harvested atcommencement, middle and end of the period of most rapid elongation. Theconcentration of GAs which might be expected to promote shoot elongation washigher during rapid elongation than toward its end for both ecotypes. Whilethere was a trend for certain GAs (GA3, GA4,GA9, GA20) to be higher in stems of the alpine ecotypeduring rapid elongation, that result does not explain the slower growth of thealpine ecotype and the faster growth of the prairie ecotype under a range ofconditions. To determine if the two ecotypes metabolized GA20differently, plants were fed [2H]- or[3H]-GA20. The metabolic products identified included[2H2]-GA1, -GA8, -GA29,-GA60, -3-epi-GA1, GA118(-1-epi-GA60) and -GA77. The concentration of[2H2]-GA1 also did not differ between the twoecotypes and metabolism of [2H2]- or[3H]-GA20 was also similar. In the same experiments thepresence of epi-GA1, GA29, GA60,GA118 and GA77 was indicated, suggesting that these GAsmay also occur naturally in S. longipes, in addition tothose described above. Collectively, these results suggest that while stemelongation within ecotypes is likely regulated by GAs, differences in GAcontent, sensitivity to GAs (GA3 excepted), or GA metabolism areunlikely to be the controlling factor in determining the differences seen ingrowth rate between the two ecotypes under the controlled environmentconditionsof this study. Nevertheless, further study is warranted especially underconditions where environmental factors may favour a GA:ethylene interaction.  相似文献   

20.
The head smut fungus, Sporisorium reilianum ([Kuhn] Landon and Fullerton), was shown to reduce plant height in infected Sorghum bicolor ([L.] Moench) plants. The major reductions occurred in the internodes nearest the panicle and were more severe in naturally infected than in inoculated plants. Less affected plants developed reproductively sterile panicles, and eventually smutted panicles developed phyllodied growths which progressed into leafy shoots. Extracts of smutted, sterile, and healthy (control) panicles of field-grown plants exhibited gibberellin (GA)-like activity in the dwarf rice bioassay. When extracts were purified and assayed with deuterium-labeled GA standards by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion monitoring (GC-MS-SIM), GA1, GA3, GA19, GA20, and GA53 were detected based on coelution with the standards, identical Kovats retention index values, and matching ion masses and relative abundances for three major ions. In addition, based on published Kovats retention index values, ion masses, and relative abundance values, GA4, GA7, GA8, GA14, GA29, and GA44 were tentatively identified. Quantitative analysis revealed that panicles of healthy control plants contained from 60 to 100% higher total concentrations of GAs than panicles of smutted plants. These comparisons were most striking for the early 13-hydroxylation pathway precursors GA53, GA44, and GA19 but not for GA20. Extracts of S. reilianum sporidia and culture medium exhibited GA-like bioactivity, and GA1 and GA3 were detected based on GC-MS-SIM assay with 2H-labeled internal standards. Quantitative analysis of these GAs showed increasing concentrations from 4 to 7 to 10 days of culture and a decline at 20 days. This is the first GC-MS-SIM detection of GAs in a non-Ascomycete fungus, and the disease symptoms and quantitative data suggested that fungal infection may interfere with biosynthesis of GAs by the host plant.  相似文献   

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