首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
In plants, ultraviolet (UV)-B acclimation is a complex, dynamic process that plays an essential role in preventing UV-B damage to targets such as DNA and the photosynthetic machinery. In this study we tested the hypothesis that the phytohormone auxin is a component of the regulatory system that controls both UV-mediated accumulation of flavonoids and UV-induced morphogenesis. We found that the leaf area of Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 plants raised under a low dose of UV radiation (0.56 kJ m(-2) daily dose) was, on average, decreased by 23% relative to plants raised in the absence of UV-B, and this was accompanied by a decrease (P = 0.063) in free auxin in young leaf tissues. Compared to Col-0, both the auxin influx mutant axr4-1 and the auxin biosynthesis mutant nit1-3 displayed significantly stronger morphogenic responses, i.e. relative decreases in leaf area were greater for these two mutants. UV exposure also induced accumulation of flavonoids. In Col-0, increases in the concentrations of specific kaempferol derivatives ranged from 2.1- to 19-fold. Thus, UV induces complex changes in flavonoid-glycosylation patterns. Compared to Col-0, three auxin mutants displayed significantly different flavonoid profiles. Thus, based on mutant analysis, it is concluded that the phytohormone auxin plays a role in UV acclimation by regulating flavonoid concentration, flavonoid-glycosylation pattern and by controlling UV-induced morphogenic responses.  相似文献   

2.
The efficiency with which a plant intercepts solar radiation is determined primarily by its architecture. Understanding the genetic regulation of plant architecture and how changes in architecture affect performance can be used to improve plant productivity. Leaf inclination angle, the angle at which a leaf emerges with respect to the stem, is a feature of plant architecture that influences how a plant canopy intercepts solar radiation. Here we identify extensive genetic variation for leaf inclination angle in the crop plant Sorghum bicolor, a C4 grass species used for the production of grain, forage, and bioenergy. Multiple genetic loci that regulate leaf inclination angle were identified in recombinant inbred line populations of grain and bioenergy sorghum. Alleles of sorghum dwarf-3, a gene encoding a P-glycoprotein involved in polar auxin transport, are shown to change leaf inclination angle by up to 34° (0.59 rad). The impact of heritable variation in leaf inclination angle on light interception in sorghum canopies was assessed using functional-structural plant models and field experiments. Smaller leaf inclination angles caused solar radiation to penetrate deeper into the canopy, and the resulting redistribution of light is predicted to increase the biomass yield potential of bioenergy sorghum by at least 3%. These results show that sorghum leaf angle is a heritable trait regulated by multiple loci and that genetic variation in leaf angle can be used to modify plant architecture to improve sorghum crop performance.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of ultraviolet-B radiation on the growth and yield of crop plants   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
This paper reviews growth chamber, greenhouse, and field studies on the effects of ultraviolet-B (UV-B. between 280 and 320 nm) radiation on agricultural crop plants. Our understanding of the physiological effects of UV-B radiation comes primarily from growth chamber studies, where UV-B is artificially supplied via filtered lamps. Both photosystems I and II, as well as carboxylating enzymes, are sensitive to UV-B radiation. Ultraviolet-B radiation also affects stomatal resistance, chlorophyll concentration, soluble leaf proteins, lipids, and carbohydrate pools. In general, the effects of UV-B radiation are accentuated by the low levels of visible radiation typically found inside growth chambers. Ultraviolet-B radiation has also been shown to affect anatomical and morphological plant characteristics. Commonly observed UV-B induced changes include plant stunting, reductions in leaf area and total biomass, and alterations in the pattern of biomass partitioning into various plant organs. In sensitive plants, evidence of cell and tissue damage often appears on the upper leaf epidermis as bronzing, glazing, and chlorosis. Epidermal transmission in the UV region decreases in irradiated leaves. This decrease is primarily associated with a stimulation in flavonoid biosynthesis and is thought to be a protective, screening response to the deleterious effects of UV-B. A considerable degree of variability exists in sensitivity to UV-B radiation between different species. Approximately 30% of the species tested were resistant, another 20% were extremely sensitive, and the remainder were of intermediate sensitivity, in terms of reductions in total dry weight. In addition to this sizable interspecific variability, there appears to be a similarly wide intraspecific variability in UV-B response. The effects of UV-B radiation on crop yield have only been examined in a limited number of field studies, with ambient levels of UV-B radiation being supplemented with fluorescent sun lamps. Due to various deficiencies, all these field experiments to date have only limited utility for assessing the potential impact of enhanced levels of UV-B on crop productivity.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Response of 19 cultivars of soybeans to ultraviolet-B irradiance   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Nineteen soybean cultivars were grown for four weeks in controlled environmental chambers with artificial daylight supplemented by five UV-B irradiance regimes to determine the range of growth and development responses of seedlings. Data from nine plant characteristics were assessed: leaf area, dry weight of leaves, stems and roots, total plant dry weight, height, ratio of roots to shoots and leaf area to weight and rating of leaves for damage. Significant differences were observed in the responses noted. Stunting, leaf chlorosis and loss of apical dominance were three general symptoms apparent on all cultivars which received UV-B irradiance. Varying degrees of reduced leaf area and dry weight of the plants and altered ratios of weights of leaves per unit area and weight of roots to shoots were also found. It was concluded that different soybean cultivars demonstrate a marked difference in sensitivity to UV-B radiation under the artificial conditions of controlled environmental growth chambers and this may indicate a genetic basis for variability in sensitivity of soybean cultivars to this waveband. However, the sensitivity to UV-B radiation was increased by the lower than normal photon fluence of photosynthetically active radiation (225 μE m−2 s−1).  相似文献   

6.
Aims UV-B radiation is known to affect plant physiology and growth rate in ways that can influence community species composition and structure. Nevertheless, comparatively little is known about how UV-B radiation induced changes in the performance of individual species cascades to affect overall community properties. Because foliage leaves are primarily responsible for photosynthesis and carbon gain and are the major organ that senses and responds to UV-B radiation, we hypothesized that, under reduced UV-B radiation, species with larger leaf areas per plant would manifest higher growth rates and hence tend to improve their community status compared to species with smaller leaf areas per plant in herbaceous plant communities.Methods We tested this hypothesis by examining plant traits (leaf area per plant and plant height), plant growth rate (aboveground biomass per plant and plant biomass per area) and community status (species within-community relative biomass) for 19 common species in a two-year field experiment in an alpine meadow on Tibetan Plateau.Important findings Aboveground biomass per plant, as well as per area, progressively increased in a 39% reduced (relative to ambient) UV-B treatment during the experimental period. At the second year, 11 out of 19 species significantly or marginally significantly increased their plant height, leaf area per plant and aboveground biomass per plant. No species was negatively affected by reducing UV-B. As hypothesized, the increase in aboveground biomass per plant increased with increasing leaf area per plant, as indicated by cross-species regression analysis. Moreover, the change in species within-community status increased with increasing leaf area per plant. Our study demonstrates that UV-B radiation has differential effects on plant growth rate across species and hence significantly affects species composition and plant community structure. We suggest that UV-B radiation is an ecological factor structuring plant communities particularly in alpine and polar areas.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
10.
We examined the influence of short-term exposure of different UV wavebands on the fine-scale kinetics of hypocotyl growth of dim red light-grown cucumbers (Cucumis sativus L.) and other selected dicotyledonous seedlings to evaluate: (1) whether responses induced by UV-B radiation (280-320 nm) are qualitatively different from those induced by UV-A (320-400 nm) radiation, and (2) whether different wavebands within the UV-B elicit different responses. Responses to brief (30 min) irradiations with 3 different UV wavebands all included transient inhibition of elongation during irradiation followed by wavelength specific responses. Irradiations with proportionally greater short wavelength UV-B (37% of UV-B between 280 and 300 nm) induced inhibition of hypocotyl elongation within 20 min of onset of irradiation, while UV-B including only wavelengths longer than 290 nm (and only 8% of UV-B between 290 and 300 nm) induced inhibition of hypocotyl elongation with a lag of 1-2 h. The response to short wavelength UV-B was persistent for at least 24 h, while the response to long wavelength UV-B lasted only 2-3 h. The UV-A treatment induced reductions in elongation rates of approximately 6-9 h following exposure followed by a continued decline in rates for the following 15-18 h. Short wavelength UV-B also induced positive phototropic curvature in both cucumber and Arabidopsis seedlings, and this response was present in nph-1 mutant Arabidopsis seedlings defective in normal blue light phototropism. Reciprocity was not found for the response to short wavelength UV-B. The short wavelength and long wavelength UV-B responses differed in dose-response relationships and both short wavelength responses (phototropic curvature and elongation inhibition) increased sharply at wavelengths below 300 nm. These results indicate that different photosensory processes are involved in mediating growth and morphological responses to short wavelength UV-B (280-300 nm), long wavelength UV-B (essentially 300-320 nm) and UV-A. The existence of two separate types of hypocotyl inhibition responses to UV-B, with one that depends on the intensity of the light source, provides alternate interpretations to findings in other studies of UV-B induced photomorphogenesis and may explain inconsistencies between action spectra for inhibition of stem growth.  相似文献   

11.
UV-B辐射对马尾松凋落叶分解和养分释放的影响   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
由大气臭氧层减薄导致的UV-B辐射变化将直接影响到凋落物的分解。目前,有关UV-B辐射影响木本植物凋落物分解的研究还很少,在国内还没有开展。采用分解袋法开展了马尾松凋落叶在自然环境和UV-B辐射滤减两种辐射环境下的分解试验。结果表明:在UV-B辐射滤减环境下的马尾松凋落叶年分解速率比对照环境减慢了47.74%。UV-B辐射极显著(p<0.01)地加快了马尾松凋落叶的分解速率,促进了凋落叶中碳、磷、钾的释放和木质素的降解,对氮的释放无明显影响。研究结果意味着UV-B辐射将加快马尾松林的营养循环速度,降低马尾松林凋落物层的碳储量。  相似文献   

12.
Gwynn-Jones  D. 《Plant Ecology》2001,154(1-2):65-73
To test the hypothesis that plant source-sink relations are important in determining response to UV-B radiation, a short-term (45 d) field experiment was conducted at Abisko Scientific Research Station, Abisko, Sweden (68° N). Tillers of the grass Calamagrostis purpurea were grown outdoors at levels of UV-B radiation representing 25% ozone depletion. Growth, respiration, photo-assimilate allocation and UV-B protective compounds were subsequently measured.There were no significant effects of enhanced UV-B on total plant dry weight, leaf area, Shoot: Root ratio, leaf weight ratio, leaf area ratio, specific leaf area, tiller number per plant or blade thickness of this species. However, the amount of UV-B absorbing compounds and respiration rates were significantly increased in young and mature leaves. Increases in leaf respiration were accompanied by alterations in plant carbohydrate allocation at enhanced UV-B. The amount of soluble root carbohydrates was reduced following UV-B exposure. Enhanced UV-B also caused increases in the soluble sugar: starch ratio of young leaves, the stem and total aboveground biomass. The importance of source-sink relations and constitutive versus induced defense are discussed in relation to UV-B response.  相似文献   

13.
Responses of aquatic algae and cyanobacteria to solar UV-B   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Sinha  Rajeshwar P.  Klisch  Manfred  Gröniger  Almut  Häder  Donat-P. 《Plant Ecology》2001,154(1-2):219-236
Continuous depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer has resulted in an increase in solar ultraviolet-B (UV-B; 280–315 nm) radiation reaching the Earth's surface. The consequences for aquatic phototrophic organisms of this small change in the solar spectrum are currently uncertain. UV radiation has been shown to adversely affect a number of photochemical and photobiological processes in a wide variety of aquatic organisms, such as cyanobacteria, phytoplankton and macroalgae. However, a number of photosynthetic organisms counteract the damaging effects of UV-B by synthesizing UV protective compounds such as mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and the cyanobacterial sheath pigment, scytonemin. The aim of this contribution is to discuss the responses of algae and cyanobacteria to solar UV-B radiation and the role of photoprotective compounds in mitigating UV-B damage.  相似文献   

14.
《植物生态学报》2017,41(4):471
Aims Exotic plant invasions are important components of global change, threatening both the stability and function of invaded ecosystems. Shifts in competitive ability of invasive plants versus their native congeners have been documented. Enhanced UV-B radiation and nitrogen (N) deposition might interact with soil biota communities impacting the invasion process of exotic plant species. To understand the potential effects by UV-B and N with soil biota on plant growth would enhance our understanding of the mechanisms in plant invasions in the context of global change.
Methods We conducted a full-factorial pot experiment in the native range (China) of Triadica sebifera invading US to investigate how UV-B radiation, N and soil biota together determined their seedling growth.
Important findings The results showed that UV-B radiation, N and soil sterilization together impacted the growth of T. sebifera seedlings. UV-B radiation induced changes in biomass allocation with larger leaf biomass observed in response to UV-B radiation. In addition, N increased aboveground biomass and decreased root biomass simultaneously. Soil biota imposed positive effects on growth of T. sebifera, and the addition of N amplified these positive effects. The negative effects by UV-B radiation on growth of T. sebifera showed no response to N addition. Plant height, leaf biomass and total biomass of the invasive T. sebifera populations out- performed those of the native ones. In addition, invasive T. sebifera populations weakened the dependence of root/shoot ratio and root biomass on local soil microorganisms than native populations, but enhanced that of leaf area ratio.  相似文献   

15.
16.
To test the hypothesis that leaf surface wax influences plant responses to UV-B, 6 lines of cultivated pea (Pisum sativum L.), selected as having more or less wax, were grown at 0 or 6.5 kJ m-2 day-1 plant-weighted UV-B against a background of 850–950 μmol m-2 s-1 photosynthetically active radiation. In the 4 lines with least leaf surface wax the amount of wax on adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces was increased following exposure to 6.5 kJ m-2 day-1 UV-B, but UV-B decreased surface wax in Scout, which had the greatest wax deposits. On the adaxial leaf surface, UV-B radiation caused a shift in wax composition from alcohols to esters and hydrocarbons and the ratio of short to long chain length alkyl ester homologues was increased. There was no evidence of a shortening in carbon chain length of hydrocarbons, primary alcohols or fatty acids due to UV-B and no significant correlation between wax amount and UV reflectance from leaves. UV-B induced significant increases in UV-absorbing compounds in the expanded leaves and buds of most lines. UV-B reduced the growth of all lines. Foliage area (leaves plus stipules) declined by 5–30%, plant dry weight by 12–30%, and plant height by 24–38%. Reductions in growth occurred in the absence of any changes in chlorophyll fluorescence or photosynthetic rate. UV-B also had no major effect on carbon allocation patterns. The effects of UV-B on growth appeared to be due to changes in tissue extension and expansion. Indeed, many of the responses to UV-B observed in this study of pea appear more consistent with indirect effects being expressed in developing tissues rather than through the direct action of UV-B on mature tissues. There was no evidence that wax amount or biochemistry was associated with the sensitivity of the lines to UV-B radiation. Furthermore, induction of pigments was not correlated with changes in growth. However, lines with the greatest constitutive amounts of pigments in unexpanded bud tissues were most tolerant of elevated UV-B.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Plant responses to solar UV radiation are numerous and have often been considered from a perspective of negative outcomes for plant productivity. In this study, we used two experimental approaches consisting of: (1) field-based spectrally modifying filters in addition to (2) controlled indoor exposure to UV-B, to examine the effects of UV radiation on growth and photosynthetic performance of lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) seedlings. Various aspects of growth were affected in plants grown under a UV-inclusive environment compared to a UV-depleted environment, including reductions in leaf expansion, increases in leaf thickness and the rate of net photosynthesis. After transplantation to a uniform field environment, lettuce plants initially propagated under the UV-inclusive environment exhibited higher harvestable yields than those from a UV-depleted environment. In controlled conditions, photosynthetic rates were higher in plants grown in the presence of UV-B radiation, and relative growth of plants pre-acclimatized to UV-B was also increased, in addition to higher maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) (F(v) /F(m) ) following subsequent exposure to high photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and temperature stress. Our findings are discussed within the context of sustainability in agriculture and the paradigm shift in photobiology which such beneficial responses to UV radiation could represent.  相似文献   

19.
The morphogenic response of somatic (leaf and petiole) and de-differentiated tissue (callus) of two blackberry (Rubus fruticosus) and one raspberry (Rubus idaeus) cultivars have been studied in vitro. With the aim to induce regeneration the effect of two sets of plant growth regulator (PGR) combinations (high cytokinin/auxin ratios and high auxin/cytokinin ratios) in Murashige and Skoog basal medium, were analysed. The three cultivars were characterised by a qualitatively different morphogenic response to the PGR combinations. Raspberry adventitious shoot regeneration from somatic tissue was improved by the 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP)/indol-3-butyric acid (IBA) combinations. On the contrary, shoot regeneration of both blackberry cultivars was reduced by high concentrations of BAP and completely inhibited by BAP/IBA combination. Media supplemented with high auxin/cytokinin ratios promoted callus production and root differentiation according to genotype and type of auxin. All the genotypes responded to media supplemented with IBA. 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid induced good callus formation in blackberry, but was toxic to raspberry. Indirect shoot formation was observed only in callus of blackberry cultivar Hull Thornless cultivated on medium with 10 μM BAP, the same concentration able to trigger efficient direct shoot regeneration from leaf explants of the same cultivar. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Epidemiological studies have revealed an inverse association between the consumption of fruit, vegetables, and herbs and the risk of both cancer and cardiovascular disease. This protective effect is mostly due to secondary metabolites present in plant tissues. During the last decade, it has become increasingly clear that UV-B radiation is an important regulator of plant secondary metabolism. Low, ecologically-relevant UV-B levels trigger distinct changes in the accumulation of, among others, phenolic compounds, carotenoids and glucosinolates. Fundamental understanding of plant UV-B perception and responses opens up new opportunities for crop manipulation. Thus, targeted low dosage UV-B radiation treatments as emerging technology may be used to generate fruit, vegetables, and herbs enriched with secondary plant metabolites for either fresh consumption or as a source for functional foods and nutraceuticals, resulting in increased ingestion of these health-promoting substances. The UV-B induced accumulation of secondary plant metabolites is likely to have evolved as a plant defense response against harmful UV-B radiation. However, UV-B induced secondary metabolites also alter other trophic interactions, for example by altering plant herbivore resistance. Thus, UV-B driven metabolic changes in the plant's secondary metabolism have benefits for both ends of the bio-based food chain, i.e., for plants themselves as well as for humans.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号