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1.
A. Lecharny  R. Jacques 《Planta》1980,149(4):384-388
The clongation of the first internode of fully greenVigna sinensis L. is inhibited by white light (W). This inhibition is fluence-rate dependent between 0 and 70 Wm–2. The kinetics of elongation rate in the light after darkness were investigated with linear displacement transducers. The internode elongation rate does not exhibit any endogenous rhythm. A rapid inhibition occurs during the first 2 or 3 h after the onset of light, and a second type of inhibition (slow reaction) increases from the beginning to the 8th hour of light. The rapid inhibition is not fluence-rate dependent between 20 and 70 Wm–2, but the slow reaction is. There is no rapid inhibition in a low fluence rate white light to high fluence rate white light transition, only the slow reaction is observed. The responses to different wavebands, i.e., blue light (B), yellow and green light (YG), and red light (R), are the same for the two inhibition reactions. Each waveband used separately does not reproduce the full effect observed in W. Results show a stimulation with B, a greater inhibition activity with YG than with R, and a synergistic action of B and R which when given together lead to an inhibition similar to that obtained in W. Plants returned from the light to darkness progressively recover a high elongation rate without any latent period. The W light regulating internode elongation rate is mainly perceived by the growing internode itself.Abbreviations B blue light - D darkness - F far-red light - HW high fluence rate white light - LW low fluence rate white light - R red light - W white light - YG yellow and green light  相似文献   

2.
Summary The inhibition of the growth rate of the first internode of Avena by red light occurs in three steps. The first step reduces elongation by ca. 15%. It is produced and saturated by 10-3 to 10-1 W sec cm-2 at =660 nm and is irreversible by far-red irradiation. All wavelengths between 400 and 800 nm produce and saturate this step. The second step, produced by red light quantities between ca. 10 and 104 W sec cm-2 reduces elongation to ca. 50% of the maximal; it is not produced by far-red light but far-red reverses completely this component of the effect of red light. The third step inhibits mesocotyl elongation to ca. 95% of the maximal. The effect of red light in this step depends on the duration of irradiation rather than on the total quantity of energy, and is not reversed by far-red irradiation. The three inhibition steps in the elongation of the mesocotyl are matched by three growth-promotion steps in the growth of the coleoptile, but the extent of the far-red-irreversible first step outweighs in this case by far the extent of the far-red-reversible second step.  相似文献   

3.
Several phytochrome-controlled processes have been examined in etiolated and light-grown seedlings of a normal genotype and the elongated internode (ein/ein) mutant of rapid-cycling Brassica rapa. Although etiolated ein seedlings displayed normal sensitivity to prolonged far-red light with respect to inhibition of hypocotyl elongation, expansion of cotyledons, and synthesis of anthocyanin, they displayed reduced sensitivity to prolonged red light for all three of these deetiolation responses. In contrast to normal seedlings, light-grown ein seedlings did not show a growth promotion in response to end-of-day far-red irradiation. Additionally, whereas the first internode of light-grown normal seedlings showed a marked increase in elongation in response to reduced ratio of red to far-red light, ein seedlings showed only a small elongation response. When blots of protein extracts from etiolated and light-treated ein and normal seedlings were probed with monoclonal antibody to phytochrome A, an immunostaining band at about 120 kD was observed for both extracts. The immunostaining intensity of this band was substantially reduced for extracts of light-treated normal and ein seedlings. A mixture of three monoclonal antibodies directed against phytochrome B from Arabidopsis thaliana immunostained a band at about 120 kD for extracts of etiolated and light-treated normal seedlings. This band was undetectable in extracts of ein seedlings. We propose that ein is a photoreceptor mutant that is deficient in a light-stable phytochrome B-like species.  相似文献   

4.
The relationship between tubulin gene expression and cell elongation was explored in developing internodes of Glycine max (L.) Merr., using light as a variable to alter the rate of elongation. First internodes of etiolated seedlings elongated two to three times more rapidly than did those of seedlings growing under a 12 hour diurnal light/dark cycle. Furthermore, light slowed or completely halted internode elongation in the etiolated seedlings, depending upon the age of the seedlings at the time of the light treatment. Steady state levels of β-tubulin mRNA were determined in Northern blots and by solution hybridization of poly(A)+RNA with a probe derived from the coding region of a previously characterized soybean β-tubulin gene. (MJ Guiltinan, DP Ma, RF Barker, MM Bustos, RJ Cyr, R Yadegari, DE Fosket [1987] Plant Mol Biol 10: 171-184). Internodes of light-grown seedlings exhibited levels of β-tubulin mRNA that differed by a factor of three, and varied concomitantly with the elongation rate. Illumination of 10-day-old etiolated seedlings not only stopped first internode elongation, but also brought about a 80% decrease in the steady state level of β-tubulin mRNA over the course of the subsequent 12 hours. This strong down regulation of β-tubulin mRNA occurred without significant changes in the size of the soluble tubulin pool and it was accompanied by a marked increase in chlorophyll a/b binding protein mRNA.  相似文献   

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

6.
Kahlen K  Stützel H 《Annals of botany》2011,108(6):1055-1063

Background and Aims

Light quantity and quality affect internode lengths in cucumber (Cucumis sativus), whereby leaf area and the optical properties of the leaves mainly control light quality within a cucumber plant community. This modelling study aimed at providing a simple, non-destructive method to predict final internode lengths (FILs) using light quantity and leaf area data.

Methods

Several simplifications of a light quantity and quality sensitive model for estimating FILs in cucumber have been tested. The direct simplifications substitute the term for the red : far-red (R : FR) ratios, by a term for (a) the leaf area index (LAI, m2 m−2) or (b) partial LAI, the cumulative leaf area per m2 ground, where leaf area per m2 ground is accumulated from the top of each plant until a number, n, of leaves per plant is reached. The indirect simplifications estimate the input R : FR ratio based on partial leaf area and plant density.

Key Results

In all models, simulated FILs were in line with the measured FILs over various canopy architectures and light conditions, but the prediction quality varied. The indirect simplification based on leaf area of ten leaves revealed the best fit with measured data. Its prediction quality was even higher than of the original model.

Conclusions

This study showed that for vertically trained cucumber plants, leaf area data can substitute local light quality data for estimating FIL data. In unstressed canopies, leaf area over the upper ten ranks seems to represent the feedback of the growing architecture on internode elongation with respect to light quality. This highlights the role of this domain of leaves as the primary source for the specific R : FR signal controlling the final length of an internode and could therefore guide future research on up-scaling local processes to the crop level.  相似文献   

7.
Jasmonates are phytohormones derived from oxygenated fatty acids that regulate a broad range of plant defense and developmental processes. In Arabidopsis, hypocotyl elongation under various light conditions was suppressed by exogenously supplied methyl jasmonate (MeJA). Moreover, this suppression by MeJA was particularly effective under red light condition. Mutant analyses suggested that SCFCOI1-mediated proteolysis was involved in this function. However, MeJA action still remained in the coi1 mutant, and (+)-7-iso-JA-L-Ile, a well-known active form of jasmonate, had a weaker effect than MeJA under the red light condition, suggesting that unknown signaling pathway are present in MeJA-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl elongation. EMS mutant screening identified two MeJA-insensitive hypocotyl elongation mutants, jasmonate resistance long hypocotyl 1 (jal1) and jal36, which had mutations in the phytochrome B (PHYB) gene. These analyses suggested that inhibition of hypocotyl elongation by jasmonates is enhanced under red light in phyB dependent manner.  相似文献   

8.
Kang BG  Burg SP 《Plant physiology》1974,53(3):445-448
In the subapical third internode of 7-day-old etiolated pea seedlings, the magnitude of phototropic curvature in response to continuous unilateral blue illumination is increased when seedlings are pre-exposed to brief red light. The effect of red light on blue light-induced phototropism becomes manifest maximally 4 or more hours after red illumination, and closely parallels the promotive action of red light on the elongation of the subapical cells. Ethylene inhibits phototropic curvature by an inhibitory action on cell elongation without affecting the lateral transport of auxin. Pretreatment of seedlings with gibberellic acid causes increased phototropic curvature, but experiments using 14C-gibberellic acid indicate that gibberellic acid itself is not laterally transported under phototropic stimuli. Neither red light nor gibberellic acid treatment has any promotive effect on blue light-induced lateral transport of 3H-indoleacetic acid. Under conditions where phototropic curvature is increased by red light treatment, low concentrations of indoleacetic acid applied in lanolin paste to the apical cut end of the seedling cause an increased elongation response in subapical tissue. This could explain increased phototropic curvature caused by red light treatment.  相似文献   

9.
T. I. Baskin 《Planta》1986,169(3):406-414
First positive phototropism of the third internode of intact, 5-d-old pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings, grown under continuous, dim red light, showed maximal response following a photon fluence of 3 mol·m-2 blue light. Greater or lesser fluences (with irradiation time 100 s or less) caused less bending, no response being detectable above 300 or below 0.03 mol·m-2. Bilateral irradiation with blue light caused no detectable inhibition of growth rate over that range of fluences. The linear nutation of the pea third internode was shown to be driven by a balanced oscillation of growth rate such that the overall growth rate was little changed during the oscillation. Phototropic stimulation changed neither the amplitude nor the period of nutation. Nutation and phototropism probably regulate growth independently. Phototropism in response to the optimal blue light fluence was caused by concomitant depressed growth on the irradiated side and stimulated growth on the shaded side of the bending internode. These results are consistent with the Cholodny-Went hypothesis which states that unilateral blue light induces a lateral redistribution of a growth regulator.Abbreviations R red light - BL blue light Carnegie Institution, Department of Plant Biology paper No. 921  相似文献   

10.
Abstract Two phytochrome-dependent processes are compared in Anagallis arvensis, an absolute long-day plant: flowering and internode elongation. The effectiveness of red or far red radiation is different according to the length of the treatment and its position within the photoperiodic cycle: for both flowering and internode elongation, 15 h treatments with wavelengths above 700 nm are promotive, whilst wavelengths below 700 nm are inhibitory. In contrast, night breaks of 3 h red light (λ < 700 nm), given after the middle of the dark period, are promotive for flowering and inhibitory for internode elongation. These results are discussed in context with data reported in the literature on photoperiodic control of long-day plants.  相似文献   

11.
Internode elongation was measured in plants of Phaseolus vulgarisand Glycine max grown under 8 h photoperiods at 25 W m–2in white fluorescent light, followed by light-extensions varyingin quality, irradiance and duration. Two distinct responsesto light were observed under these conditions. A reduction in PFR/P increased elongation, but elongation wasalso modified by a second reaction in which internode lengthincreased with increase in the duration and irradiance of theday-extension. This light-promoted response occurred in bothred and blue light. In the PFR-inhibition response, light acteddirectly on the expanding internode. The light-promoted response,in contrast, required irradiation of the leaf. The response to a short end-of-day exposure to far-red lightprogressively diminished as successive internodes expanded underthe treatment, whereas the light-promoted response increased.The two processes appeared to interact and, in the later-expandinginternodes, the effect of a reduction in PFR was greater underlong day-extensions with mixed red and far-red light than inthe end-of-day treatments. 1 Present address: British Telecom, Brunel House, 2 FitzalanRoad, Cardiff, U.K.  相似文献   

12.
The photomorphogenic mutation lv in the garden pea (Pisum sativum L.), which appears to reduce the response to light-stable phytochrome, has been isolated on a tall, late photoperiodic genetic background and its effects further characterised. Plants possessing lv have a reduced flowering response to photoperiod relative to wild-type plants, indicating that light-stable phytochrome may have a flower-inhibitory role in the flowering response of long-day plants to photoperiod. In general, lv plants are longer and have reduced leaf development relative to Lv plants. These differences are maximised under continuous light from fluorescent lamps (containing negligible far-red (FR) light), and decrease with addition of FR to the incident light. Enrichment of white light from fluorescent lamps with FR promotes stem elongation in the wild type but causes a reduction in elongation in the lv mutant. This “negative” shade-avoidance response appears to be the consequence of a strong inhibitory effect of light rich in FR, revealed in lv plants in the absence of a normal response to red (R) light. These results indicate that the wild-type response to the R: FR ratio may be comprised of two distinct photoresponses, one in which FR supplementation promotes elongation by reducing the inhibitory effect of R, and the other in which light rich in FR actively inhibits elongation. This hypothesis is discussed in relation to functional differentiation of phytochrome types in the light-grown plant. Gene lw has been reported previously to reduce internode length and the response to gibberellin A1, and to delay flowering. The present study shows that the lw mutation confers an increased response to photoperiod. In all these responses the lw phenotype is superficially “opposite” to the lv phenotype. The possibility that the mutation might primarily affect light perception was therefore considered. The degree of dwarfing of lw plants was found to depend upon light quality and quantity. Dwarfing is more extreme in plants grown under continuous R light than in those grown in continuous FR or blue light or in darkness. Studies of the fluence-rate response show that the lw mutation imparts a lower fluence requirement for inhibition of elongation by white light from fluorescent lamps. Dark-grown lw plants are more strongly inhibited by a R pulse than are wild-type plants but, as in the wild type, this inhibition remains reversible by FR. Light-grown lw plants show an exaggerated elongation response to end-of-day FR light. Taken together, these findings indicate that the lw mutant may be hypersensitive to phytochrome action.  相似文献   

13.
Dark treatment during the most active period of tulip shootgrowth induced rapid elongation of the first internode. Endogenousfree-form gibberellin and diffusible auxin in the first internodeincreased while bound-form gibberellin decreased after the darktreatment. Alternating dark and light treatments at 24-h intervalscaused increases in elongation of the first internode and theamounts of free-form gibberellin and diffusible auxin in thedark but their decreases in the light. TIBA treatment at thefirst node inhibited both the elongation and the increase indiffusible auxin, but did not affect the gibberellin amount.Ancymidol application prior to the dark treatment inhibitedthe increase in both free-form gibberellin and diffusible auxin.Application of gibberellin A3 increased both elongation of thefirst internode and the amount of diffusible auxin. It alsocaused recovery from ancymidol-mediated reduction in elongationand diffusible auxin content. Dark-induced elongation of thefirst internode was inhibited when all organs above the firstinternode were excised, but endogenous free-form gibberellinincreased and bound-form gibberellin decreased. After excision,elongation of the first internode occurred only when both GA3and IAA were applied exogenously, or when IAA was applied withdark treatment. These results indicate that dark-induced elongationof the first internode of tulip is promoted by auxin, whichis transported from the upper organs into the first internodedue to stimulation from the dark-induced increase in free-formgibberellin. Free- and bound-form gibberellins changed complementarilywith the dark and light treatments. An interconversion systembetween the two forms in the first internode and its dependenceon light conditions are also discussed. (Received June 23, 1984; Accepted March 5, 1985)  相似文献   

14.
Many auxin responses are dependent on redistribution and/or polar transport of indoleacetic acid. Polar transport of auxin can be inhibited through the application of phytotropins such as 1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA). When Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings were grown in the light on medium containing 1.0 μm NPA, hypocotyl and root elongation and gravitropism were strongly inhibited. When grown in darkness, however, NPA disrupted the gravity response but did not affect elongation. The extent of inhibition of hypocotyl elongation by NPA increased in a fluence-rate-dependent manner to a maximum of about 75% inhibition at 50 μmol m−2 s−1 of white light. Plants grown under continuous blue or far-red light showed NPA-induced hypocotyl inhibition similar to that of white-light-grown plants. Plants grown under continuous red light showed less NPA-induced inhibition. Analysis of photoreceptor mutants indicates the involvement of phytochrome and cryptochrome in mediating this NPA response. Hypocotyls of some auxin-resistant mutants had decreased sensitivity to NPA in the light, but etiolated seedlings of these mutants were similar in length to the wild type. These results indicate that light has a significant effect on NPA-induced inhibition in Arabidopsis, and suggest that auxin has a more important role in elongation responses in light-grown than in dark-grown seedlings.  相似文献   

15.
Hypocotyl cell elongation has been studied as a model to understand how cellular expansion contributes to plant organ growth. Hypocotyl elongation is affected by multiple environmental factors, including light quantity and light quality. Red light inhibits hypocotyl growth via the phytochrome signaling pathways. Proteins of the FLAVIN-BINDING KELCH REPEAT F-BOX 1 / LOV KELCH PROTEIN 2 / ZEITLUPE family are positive regulators of hypocotyl elongation under red light in Arabidopsis. These proteins were suggested to reduce phytochrome-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl elongation. Here, we show that ZEITLUPE also functions as a positive regulator in warmth-induced hypocotyl elongation under light in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

16.
Lettuce seed germination or lettuce root elongation after germination in water was inhibited by coumarin and these inhibitions were reversed by Cycocel. 2.53 × 103 M Cycocel reversed the inhibition of seed germination by 6.8 × 104 M coumarin. and 6.32 × lO?4 M Cycocel reversed the inhibition of root elongation by 3.4 × 103 M coumarin. No other analogs of Cycocel reversed these coumarin induced inhibitions of growth. Cycocel reversal of coumarin inhibition of lettuce seed germination occurred in red light but not in far-red light or darkness. The red-far-red system was photoreversible. Cycocel and kinetin appear to act similarly in reversing coumarin inhibition of germination. Gibberellin A3 and IAA were unable to reverse these coumarin induced inhibitions. A common mechanism is suggested for Cycocel reversal of coumarin and lAA inhibition of growth.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the role of auxin on stem elongation in pea (Pisum sativum L.) grown for 10d in continuous darkness or under low-irradiance blue, red, far red and white light. The third internode of treated seedlings was peeled and the tissues (epidermis and cortex+central cylinder) were separately analyzed for the concentration of free and conjugated indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). Under red, far red and white light internode elongation was linearly related with the free IAA content of all internode tissues, suggesting that phytochrome-dependent inhibition of stem growth may be mediated by a decrease of free IAA levels in pea seedlings. The correlation between IAA and internode elongation, however, did not hold for blue light-grown seedlings. The hypothesis that the growth response under low-irradiance blue light might be correlated with the lack of phytochrome B signalling and changes in gibberellin metabolism is discussed in view of current knowledge on hormonal control of stem growth.  相似文献   

18.
Jorge J. Casal  Harry Smith 《Planta》1988,176(2):277-282
Under continuous white light (WL), extension growth of the first internode in Sinapis alba L. was promoted by low red (R): far-red (FR) ratios reaching the stem and-or the leaves. Conversely, the growth promotion by end-of-day light treatments was only triggered by FR perceived by the leaves and cotyledons, while FR given to the growning internode alone was tatally ineffective. Continuous WL+FR given to the internode was also in-effective if the rest of the shoot remained in darkness. Both the background stem growth, and the growth promotion caused by either an end-of-day FR pulse or continuous WL+FR given to the internode, increased with increasing fluence rates of WL given to the rest of the shoot. The increase by WL of the growth-stimulatory effect of low phytochrome photoequilibria in the internode appears to be mediated by a specific blue-light-absorbing photoreceptor, as blue-deficient light from sodium-discharge lamps, or from filtered fluorescent tubes, promoted background stem growth similarly to WL but did not amplify the response to the R:FR ratio in the internode. Supplementing the blue-deficient light (94 mol·m-2·s-1) with low fluence rates of blue (<9 mol·m-2·s-1) restored the promotive effect of low R:FR reaching the internode.Abbreviations BL blue light - FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pfr/P ratio between the FR-absorbing form and total phytochrome - R red light - SOX low-pressure sodium lamp - WL white light Supported by the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas (República Argentina) and the ORS scheme (UK)  相似文献   

19.
Continuous recordings of the effect of light on oat (Avena sativa L. cv. Victory) coleoptile and pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) epicotyl growth were made. Using a single excised coleoptile 10 minutes of red light was found to promote growth after a latent period of 46 minutes. The stimulation was transient and was not far red-reversible. Blue and far red light also promoted growth with similar kinetics. The action of continuous red or far red light was similar to that of 10-minute light. The growth of the intact pea third internode (as well as excised segments) was strongly inhibited by red light, with a latent period of 80 minutes. This effect was far red-reversible, and far red and blue light caused only a slight inhibition of growth.  相似文献   

20.
Irradiation with blue light causes a rapid decrease in stem elongation in Pisum sativum. Growing plants under continuous red light allowed us to study the fluence dependence and spatial distribution of blue-induced growth effects without interference from large changes in the ratio of the far-red absorbing form of phytochrome to total phytochrome. The magnitude of the inhibition generated by a 30-second pulse of blue light was linearly related to the log of the fluence applied over two orders of magnitude. Reciprocity held for irradiations with a pulse length shorter than the lag time for the response. The spatial distribution of inhibition was studied by marking the growing zone and photographing the stem at 10-minute intervals before, during, and after a 1-hour exposure to blue light. The region just below the hook does not undergo any perceptible change in growth rate while growth is nearly 100% inhibited in the base of the third internode.  相似文献   

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