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1.
The roles of phytochrome A (phyA), phytochrome B (phyB) and a putative blue-light (BL) photoreceptor (HY4) in the control of hypocotyl growth by natural radiation were investigated using phyA, phyB and hy4 mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. Full sunlight inhibited hypocotyl growth to a larger extent in wild-type (WT) than in phyA, phyB and, particularly, hy4 seedlings. In WT seedlings, hypocotyl growth was promoted by selectively lowering BL irradiance, lowering red-light (R) plus far-red-light (FR) irradiance or lowering the R/FR ratio (which was achieved either by increasing FR or by reducing R). The effects of lowering BL were reduced in hy4 and exaggerated in phyA seedlings. The effects of lowering R+FR were reduced in phyA and exaggerated in hy4 seedlings. Neither phyB nor hy4 mutants responded to low R/FR ratios. Neighbouring plants reflecting FR without shading caused subtle reductions of the R/FR ratio. This signal promoted hypocotyl growth in WT but not in phyA, phyB or hy4 seedlings. Intermediate canopy shade produced similar effects in all genotypes. Under deep shade, de-etiolation was severely impaired in phyA seedlings, which died prematurely. Thus, the FR ‘high-irradiance reaction’ mediated by phyA could be important for seedling survival under dense canopies.  相似文献   

2.
Dual effect of phytochrome A on hypocotyl growth under continuous red light   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4  
The role of phytochrome A in the control of hypocotyl growth under continuous red light (Rc) was investigated using phyA and phyB mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana, which lack phytochrome A (phyA) or phytochrome B (phyB), respectively, and transgenic seedlings of Nicotiana tabacum overexpressing Avena phyA, compared to the corresponding wild type (WT). In WT seedlings of A. thaliana, hypocotyl growth inhibition showed a biphasic response to the fluence rate of Rc, with a brake at 10?2μmol m?2 s?1. At equal total fluence rate, hourly pulses of red light caused slightly more inhibition than Rc. The response to very low fluences of continuous or pulsed red light was absent in the phyA and phyA phyB mutants and present in the phyB mutant. The second part of the response was steeper in the phyA mutant than in the WT but was absent in the phyB mutant. In WT tobacco the response to Rc was biphasic. Overexpression of Avena phyA enhanced the response only at very low fluence rates of Rc (< 10?2μmol m?2 s?1). In both species, the effect of hourly pulses of far-red light was similar to the maximum inhibition observed in the first phase of the response to Rc. Using reciprocity failure (i.e. higher inhibition under continuous than pulsed light) as the operational criterion, a ‘true’ high-irradiance reaction occurred under continuous far-red light but not under Rc or red plus far-red light mixtures. Native and overexpressed phyA are proposed to mediate very low fluence responses under Rc. In WT A. thaliana, this effect is counteracted by a negative action of phyA on phyB-mediated low-fluence responses.  相似文献   

3.
A comparison of the photoregulation of development has been made for etiolated and light-grown plants of wild-type (WT) tobacco (Nicotiana tabacun L.) and an isogenic transgenic line which expresses an introduced oat phytochrome gene (phyA) under the control of a constitutive viral promoter. Etiolated seedlings of both the WT and transgenic line showed irradiance-dependent inhibition of hypocotyl growth under continuous far-red (FR) light; transgenic seedlings showed a greater level of inhibition under a given fluence rate and this is considered to be the result of the heterologous phytochrome protein (PhyA) functioning in a compatible manner with the native etiolated phytochrome. Deetiolation of WT seedlings resulted in a loss of responsiveness to prolonged FR. Light-grown transgenic seedlings, however, continued to respond in an irradiance-dependent manner to prolonged FR and it is proposed that this is a specific function of the constitutive PhyA. Mature green plants of the WT and transgenic lines showed a qualitatively similar growth promotion to a brief end-of-day FR-treatment but this response was abolished in the transgenic plants under prolonged irradiation by this same FR source. Growth inhibition (McCormac et al. 1991, Planta 185, 162–170) and enhanced levels of nitrate-reductase activity under irradiance of low red:far-red ratio, as achieved by the FR-supplementation of white light, emphasised that the introduced PhyA was eliciting an aberrant mode of photoresponse compared with the normal phytochrome population of light-grown plants. Total levels of the oat-encoded phytochrome in the etiolated transgenic tobacco were shown to be influenced by the wavelength of continuous irradiation in a manner which was qualitatively similar to that seen for the native, etiolated tobacco phytochrome, and distinct from that seen in etiolated oat tissues. These results are discussed in terms of the proposal that the constitutive oat-PhyA pool in the transgenic plants leads to a persistence of a mode of response normally restricted to the situation in etiolated plants.Abbreviations FR far-red light - R red light - WL white light - WL + FR white light supplemented with FR - HIR high-irradiance response - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pr, Pfr R- and FR-absorbing forms of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - phyA (PhyA) gene (encoded protein) for phytochrome - WT wild type This work was supported by an Agricultural and Food Research Council research grant to H.S. and A.M.; J.R. Cherry and R.D. Vierstra, (Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) are thanked for the provision of the transgenic tobacco line.  相似文献   

4.
A combination of physiological and genetic approaches was used to investigate whether phytochromes and blue light (BL) photoreceptors act in a fully independent manner during photomorphogenesis of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. Wild-type seedlings and phyA, phyBand hy4 mutants were daily exposed to 3 h BL terminated with either a red light (R) or a far-red light (FR) pulse. In wild-type and phyA-mutant seedlings, BL followed by an R pulse inhibited hypocotyl growth and promoted cotyledon unfolding. The effects of BL were reduced if exposure to BL was followed by an FR pulse driving phytochrome to the R-absorbing form (Pr). In the wild type, the effects of R versus FR pulses were small in seedlings not exposed to BL. Thus, maximal responses depended on the presence of both BL and the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) in the subsequent dark period. Impaired responses to BL and to R versus FR pulses were observed in phyB and hy4 mutants. Simultaneous irradiation with orange light indicated that BL, perceived by specific BL photoreceptors (i.e. not by phytochromes), required phytochrome B to display a full effect. These results indicate interdependent co-action between phytochrome B and BL photoreceptors, particularly the HY4 gene product. No synergism between phytochrome A (activated by continuous or pulsed FR) and BL photoreceptors was observed.Abbreviations BL blue light - D darkness - FR far-redlight - FRc continuous FR - Pfr FR-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr/P proportion of phytochrome as Pfr - phyA phytochrome A - phyB phytochrome B - R red light - WT wild type We thank Professors R.E. Kendrick and M. Koornneef (Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands), Professor J. Chory (Salk Institute, Calif., USA) and the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (Ohio State University, Ohio, USA) for their kind provision of the original seed batches. This work was financially supported by CONICET, Universidad de Buenos Aires (AG 040) and Fundación Antorchas (A-12830/1 0000/9)  相似文献   

5.
J J Casal 《Plant physiology》1996,112(3):965-973
We sought to determine if phytochrome B (phyB)-mediated responses to the red light (R)/far-red light (FR) ratio are affected by phytochrome A (phyA) activity in light-grown seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana. Pulses of FR delayed into the dark period were less effective than end-of-day (EOD) FR in promoting hypocotyl growth over a given period in darkness. White light minus blue light interposed instead of darkness between the end of the white-light photoperiod and the FR pulse was sufficient to maintain responsivity to the decrease in phyB in FR-light-absorbing form in wild-type (WT) seedlings, but not in the phyA mutant. Compared with EOD R, hourly R+FR pulses provided throughout the night caused a stronger promotion of stem growth than a single EOD R+FR pulse in WT Arabidopsis, cucumber, mustard, sunflower, tobacco, and tomato, but not in phyA Arabidopsis or in the aurea mutant of tomato. WT seedlings of Arabidopsis responded to a range of high EOD R/FR ratios, whereas the phyA mutant required stronger reductions in the EOD R/FR ratio. In sunlight, phyA seedlings of Arabidopsis showed no response to the "early warning" signals of neighboring vegetation, and hypocotyl-growth promotion occurred at higher plant densities than in the WT. Thus, under a series of light conditions, the sensitivity or responsivity to reductions in the R/FR ratio were larger in WT than in phyA seedlings. A product of phyA is therefore proposed to enhance the hypocotyl-growth response to decreases in phyB in FR-light-absorbing form in light grown seedlings.  相似文献   

6.
A major function of phytochromes in light-grown plants involves the perception of changes in the relative amounts of red and far-red light (R:FR ratio) and the initiation of the shade-avoidance response. In Arabidopsis thaliana, this response is typified by increased elongation growth of petioles and accelerated flowering and can be fully induced by end-of-day far-red light (EOD FR) treatments. Phytochrome B-deficient (phyB) mutants, which have a constitutive elongated-petiole and early-flowering phenotype, do not display a petiole elongation growth response to EOD FR, but they do respond to EOD FR by earlier flowering. Seedlings deficient in both phytochrome A and phytochrome B (phyA phyB), have a greatly reduced stature compared with wild-type or either monogenic mutant. The phyA phyB double null mutants also respond to EOD FR treatments by flowering early, suggesting the operation of novel phytochromes. Contrary to the behaviour of wild-type or monogenic phyA or phyB seedlings, petiole elongation in phyA phyB seedlings is reduced in response to EOD FR treatments. This reduction in petiole elongation is accompanied by the appearance of elongated internodes such that under these conditions the plants no longer display a rosette habit.  相似文献   

7.
Deletion or substitution of the serine-rich N-terminal stretch of grass phytochrome A (phyA) has repeatedly been shown to yield a hyperactive photoreceptor when expressed under the control of a constitutive promoter in transgenic tobacco or Arabidopsis seedlings retaining their native phyA. These observations have lead to the proposal that the serine-rich region is involved in negative regulation of phyA signaling. To re-evaluate this conclusion in a more physiological context we produced transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings of the phyA-null background expressing Arabidopsis PHYA deleted in the sequence corresponding to amino acids 6–12, under the control of the native PHYA promoter. Compared to the transgenic seedlings expressing wild-type phyA, the seedlings bearing the mutated phyA showed normal responses to pulses of far-red (FR) light and impaired responses to continuous FR light. In yeast two-hybrid experiments, deleted phyA interacted normally with FHY1 and FHL, which are required for phyA accumulation in the nucleus. Immunoblot analysis showed reduced stability of deleted phyA under continuous red or FR light. The reduced physiological activity can therefore be accounted for by the enhanced destruction of the mutated phyA. These findings do not support the involvement of the serine-rich region in negative regulation but they are consistent with a recent report suggesting that phyA turnover is regulated by phosphorylation. Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

8.
Avena phytochrome A (phyA) overexpressed in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) and tomato (Lycopersicon sculentum Mill) was functionally characterised by comparing wild-type (WT) and transgenic seedlings. Different proportions of phytochrome in its far-red-absorbing form (Pfr/P) were provided by end-of-day (EOD) light pulses. Stem-length responses occurred largely in the range of low Pfr/P (3–61%) for WT seedlings and in the range of high Pfr/P (61–87%) for transgenic seedlings. A similar shift was observed when the photoperiod was interrupted by short light pulses providing different Pfr/P ratios and followed by 1 h dark incubation. In other experiments, Avena phyA was allowed to re-accumulate in darkness and subsequently phototransformed to Pfr but no extra inhibition of stem extension growth was observed. In transgenic tomato seedlings the response to EOD far-red light was faster and the response to a far-red light pulse delayed into darkness was larger than in the WT. Avena phyA Pfr remaining at the end of the photoperiod appears intrinsically unable to sustain growth inhibition in subsequent darkness. Avena phyA modifies the sensitivity and the kinetics of EOD responses mediated by native phytochrome.Abbreviations EOD end-of-day - FR far-red light - Pfr/P pro-portion of phytochrome in its FR-absorbing form - phyA phyto-chrome A - phyB phytochrome B - R red light - RFR R to FR ratio - WT wild type We thank Dr Brian Thomas for providing the antibodies used in this work, and Federico Guerendiain for his excellent technical assistance. This work was financially supported by grants UBA AG 040 and Fundacion Antorchas A-12830/1-19 (both to J.J.C.), PID-CONICET (to R.A.S. and J.J.C.), United States Department of Energy DE-FG02-88ER13968 (to R.D.V.).  相似文献   

9.
Jorge J. Casal 《Planta》1995,196(1):23-29
Etiolated seedlings of the wild-type (WT) and of the phyB-1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. were exposed to red-light (R) and far-red light (FR) treatments to characterize the action of phytochrome B on hypocotyl extension growth. A single R or FR pulse had no detectable effects on hypocotyl growth. After 24-h pre-treatment with continuous FR (FRc) a single R, compared to FR pulse inhibited (more than 70%) subsequent hypocotyl growth in the WT but not in the phyB-1 mutant. This effect of FRc was fluence-rate dependent and more efficient than continuous R (Rc) or hourly FR pulses of equal total fluence. Hypocotyl growth inhibition by Rc was larger in WT than phyB-1 seedlings when chlorophyll screening was reduced either by using broadband Rc (maximum emission 610 nm) or by using narrow-band Rc (658 nm) over short periods (24 h) or with seedlings bleached with Norflurazon. Hourly R or R + FR pulses had similar effects in WT and phyB-1 mutant etiolated seedlings. It is concluded that phytochrome B is not the only photoreceptor of Rc and that the action of phytochrome B is enhanced by a FRc high-irradiance reaction. Complementary experiments with the phyA-201 mutant indicate that this promotion of a phytochrome B-mediated response occurs via co-action with phytochrome A.Abbreviations D darkness - FR far-red light - FRc continuous FR - Pfr FR-absorbing form of phytochrome - HIR high-irradiance reaction - Pfr/P proportion of phytochrome as Pfr - phyA phytochrome A - phyB phytochrome B - R red light - Rc continuous R - WT wild-type I thank Professors R.E. Kendrick and M. Koornneef (Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands) and Professor J. Chory (Salk Institute, Calif., USA) for their kind provision of the original WT and phyB-1 and phyA-201 seed, respectively. This work was financially supported by grants PID and PID-BID from CONICET, AG 040 from Universidad de Buenos Aires and A 12830/1-000019 from Fundación Antorchas.  相似文献   

10.
Experiments were carried out to explore the involvement of gibberellins(GAs) in the light-induced germination of Arabidopsis thaliana(L.) Heynh, using wild type (WT) and phytochrome-deficient mutants(phyA, phyB and phyAphyB deficient in phytochrome A, B and Aplus B, respectively). Seed germination of WT and phytochrome-deficientmutants was inhibited by uniconazole (an inhibitor of an earlystep in biosynthesis of GA, the oxidation of ent-kaurene) andprohexadione (an inhibitor of late steps, namely, 2rß-and 3rß-hydroxylation). This inhibition was overcomeby simultaneous application of 10-5 M GA4. The relative activityof GAs for promoting germination of uniconazole-treated seedswas GA4>GA1=GA9>GA20. The wild type and the phyA and phyBmutants had an increased response to a red light pulse in thepresence of GA1, GA4, GA9, GA20 and GA24 but there were no significantdifferences in activity of each GA between the mutants. Therefore,neither phytochrome A nor hytochrome B appears to regulate GAbiosynthesis from GA12 to GA4 during seed germination, sincethe conversion of GA12 to GA9 is regulated by one enzyme (GA20-oxidase). However, GA responsiveness appears to be regulatedby phytochromes other than phytochromes A and B, since the phyAphyBdouble mutant retains the photoreversible increased responseto GAs after a red light pulse. (Received February 13, 1995; Accepted July 11, 1995)  相似文献   

11.
The physiological responses of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants that express high levels of an introduced oat (Avena sativa L.) phytochrome (phyA) gene to various light treatments are compared with those of wild-type (WT) plants. Seeds, etiolated seedlings, and light-grown plants from a homozygous transgenic tobacco line (9A4) constructed by Keller et al. (EMBO J, 8, 1005–1012, 1989) were treated with red (R), far-red (FR), or white light (WL) with or without supplemental FR light, revealing major perturbations of the normal photobiological responses. White light stimulated germination of both WT and transgenic seed, but addition of FR to the WL treatment suppressed germination. In the WT, all fluence rates tested inhibited germination, but in the transgenics, reduction effluence rate partially relieved germination from the FR-mediated inhibition. It is suggested that the higher absolute levels of the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) in the irradiated transgenics, compared to the WT, may be responsible for the reduced FR-mediated inhibition of germination in the former. Hypocotyl extension of dark-grown seedlings of both WT and transgenic lines was inhibited by continuous R or FR irradiation, typical of the high-irradiance response (HIR). After 2 d of de-etiolation in WL, the WT seedlings had lost the FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension, whereas it was retained in the transgenics. The FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension in the transgenic seedlings after de-etiolation may reflect the persistence of an, FR-HIR response mediated by the overexpressed oat PhyA phytochrome. Light-grown WT seedlings exhibited typical shade-avoidance responses when treated with WL supplemented with high levels of FR radiation. Internode and petiole extension rates were markedly increased, and the chlorophyll ab ratio decreased, in the low-R: FR treatment. The transgenics, however, showed no increases in extension growth under low-R: FR treatments, and at low fluence rates both internode and petiole extension rates were significantly decreased by low R FR. Interpretation of these data is difficult. The depression of the chlorophyll ab ratio by low R FR was identical in WT and transgenic plants, indicating that not all shade-avoidance responses of light-grown plants were disrupted by the over-expression of the introduced oat phyA gene. The results are discussed in relation to the proposal that different members of the phytochrome family may have different physiological roles.Abbreviations FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pr, Pfr red- and FR-absorbing forms of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - PhyA (PhyA) gene (encoded protein) for phytochrome - R red light - WL white light - WT wild type This work was supported by an Agricultural and Food Research Council research grant to H.S. and A.C.M.; the production of the transgenic seed was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-F602-88ER13968) to R.D.V., and by E.I. du Pont de Nemours; Dr. G.C. Whitelam is thanked for the provision of monoclonal antibodies for the immunoblot analyses.  相似文献   

12.
In order to test the interaction of different phytochromes and blue-light receptors, etiolated seedlings of wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh., a phytochrome (phy) B-overexpressor line (ABO), and the photoreceptor mutants phyA-201, phyB-5, hy4-2.23n, fha-1, phyA-201/phyB-5, and phyA-201/hy4-2.23n were exposed to red and far-red light pulses after various preirradiations. The responsiveness to the inductive red pulses is primarily mediated by phyB which is rather stable in its far-red-absorbing form as demonstrated by a very slow loss of reversibility. Without preirradiation the red pulses had an impact on hypocotyl elongation only in PHYA mutants but not in the wild type. This indicates a suppression of phyB function by the presence of phyA. Preirradiation with either far-red or blue light resulted in an inhibition of hypocotyl elongation by red pulses in the wild type. Responsiveness amplification by far-red light is mediated by phyA and disappears slowly in the dark. The extent of responsiveness amplification by blue light was identical in the wild type and in the absence of phyA, or the cryptochromes cryl (hy4-2.23n) or cry2 (fha-1). Therefore, we conclude that stimulation of phyB by blue light preirradiation is either mediated by an additional still-unidentified blue-light-absorbing pigment or that phyA, cry1 and cry2 substitute for each other completely. Both blue and red preirradiation established responsiveness to red pulses in phyA-201/phyB-5 double mutants. These results demonstrate that inhibition of hypocotyl elongation by red pulses is not only mediated by phyB but also by a phytochrome(s) other than phyA and phyB. Received: 21 July 1998 / Accepted: 7 December 1998  相似文献   

13.
Hypocotyls of dark-grown seedlings of Ara bidosis thaliana exhibit a strong negative gravitropism, which is reduced by red and also by long-wavelength, far-red light treatments. Light treatments using phytochrome A (phyA)- and phytochrome B (phyB)-deficient mutants showed that this response is controlled by phyB in a red/far-red reversible way, and by phyA in a non-reversible, very-low-fluence response. Crosses of the previously analyzed phyB-1 allele (in the ecotype Landsberg erecta background) to the ecotype Nossen wild-type (WT) background resulted in a WT-like negative gravitropism in darkness, indicating that the previously described gravitropic randomization observed with phyB-1 in the dark is likely due to a second mutation independent of that in the PHYB gene.Abbreviations FR long-wavelength far-red light - phyA phytochrome A (holoprotein) - phyB phytochrome B (holoprotein) - Pr red-absorbing form of phytochrome - WT wild type We thank Dr. A. Nagatani (RIKEN Institute, Wako-City, Japan) and Dr. M. Furuya (Hitachi, Hatoyama, Japan) for the phyA-201/phyB-5 double mutant. The work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and Human Frontier Science Program grants to E.S.  相似文献   

14.
Several aspects of the photophysiology of wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings were compared with those of a phytochrome A null mutant, phyA-1, and a mutant, fhy1, that is putatively involved in the transduction of light signals from phytochrome A. Although phyA seedlings display a near wild-type phenotype when grown in white light (W), they nevertheless display several photomorphogenic abnormalities. Thus, whereas the germination of wild-type and fhy1 seeds is almost fully promoted by a pulse of red light (R) or by continuous far-red light (FR), phyA seed germination is responsive only to R. Following growth under day/night cycles, but not under continuous W, the hypocotyls of light-grown phyA and fhy1 seedlings are more elongated than those of wild-type seedlings. For seedlings grown under low red/far-red (R/FR) ratio light conditions, phyA and fhy1 seedlings display a more marked promotion of hypocotyl elongation than wild-type seedlings. Similarly, seedlings that are doubly null for phytochrome A and phytochrome B(phyA phyB) also have more elongated hypocotyls under low R/FR ratio conditions than phyB seedlings. This indicates that phytochrome A action in light-grown seedlings is antagonistic to the action of phytochrome B. Although wild-type, fhy1, and phyA seedlings flower at essentially the same time under both short-day and long-day conditions, an obvious consequence of phytochrome A deficiency is a pronounced late flowering under conditions where a short day of 8 h of fluorescent W is extended by 8 h of low-fluence-rate incandescent light. The evidence thus indicates that phytochrome A plays a role in seed germination, in the control of elongation growth of light-grown seedlings, and in the perception of daylength.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of phototransduction of phytochrome A (phyA) and phytochrome B (phyB) were compared in etiolated Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings. The responses of hypocotyl growth, cotyledon unfolding, and expression of a light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of the photosystem II gene promoter fused to the coding region of β-glucuronidase (used as a reporter enzyme) were mediated by phyA under continuous far-red light (FR) and by phyB under continuous red light (R). The seedlings were exposed hourly either to n min of FR followed by 60 minus n min in darkness or to n min of R, 3 min of FR (to back-convert phyB to its inactive form), and 57 minus n min of darkness. For the three processes investigated here, the kinetics of phototransduction of phyB were faster than that of phyA. For instance, 15 min R h−1 (terminated with a FR pulse) were almost as effective as continuous R, whereas 15 min of FR h−1 caused less than 30% of the effect of continuous FR. This difference is interpreted in terms of divergence of signal transduction pathways downstream from phyA and phyB.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Seeds of the wild type (WT) and of the phyA and phyB mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana were exposed to single red light (R)/far-red light (FR) pulses predicted to establish a series of calculated phytochrome photoequilibria (Pfr/P). WT and phyB seeds showed biphasic responses to Pfr/P. The first phase, i.e. the very-low-fluence response (VLFR), occurred below Pfr/P = 10-1%. The second phase, i.e. the low-fluence response, occurred above Pfr/P = 3%. The VLFR was similarly induced by either a FR pulse saturating photoconversion or a subsaturating R pulse predicted to establish the same Pfr/P. The VLFR was absent in phyA seeds, which showed a strong low-fluence response. In the field, even brief exposures to the very low fluences of canopy shade light (R/FR ratio < 0.05) promoted germination above dark controls in WT and phyB seeds but not in the phyA mutant. Seeds of the phyA mutant germinated normally under canopies providing higher R/FR ratios or under deep canopy shade light supplemented with R from light-emitting diodes. We propose that phytochrome A mediates VLFR of A. thaliana seeds.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Internode extension-growth responses to neighbouring plants and to red to far-red ratios (R:FR) were investigated in wild-type (WT) and aurea (au)-mutant seedlings of tomato grown under natural radiation. The genomic location of the au mutant is not known, but one of its consequences is the reduced phytochrome level. In WT seedlings, internode growth was promoted by the presence of non-shading neighbours reflecting far-red light (FR), the shade of a tall canopy, FR provided as a supplement during the photoperiod, and FR pulses either provided at the end of the day or delayed into the dark period. Supplementary FR during the photoperiod also promoted growth in herbicide-treated partially bleached WT seedlings. The au mutant showed higher background extension-growth rates, but only responded to the most severe treatments: deep shade light and very low R:FR at the end of the day, i.e. au-mutant seedlings were less sensitive than WT seedlings to R:FR signals. Wild-type seedlings were transferred from the glasshouse to a growth room and exposed to white light with two levels of phytochrome-absorbable radiation but similar phytochrome photoequilibria and radiation for photosynthesis. The plants exposed to the lowest level showed a transient increase of internode extension growth rate and a simultaneous reduction of response to FR pulses, i.e. reproduced some of the features of au-mutant seedlings. Phytochrome itself could set the degree of response to Pfr during neighbour detection.  相似文献   

20.
Photoinduction and photoinhibition of germination in seed from a homozygous tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) line containing an introduced oat phyA cDNA (encoding phytochrome A) is compared with that of isogenic wild-type (WT) tobacco. Under continuous irradiation by a light source with a low redfar-red (RFR) ratio the transgenic tobacco seed appeared to be less susceptible to photoinhibition of germination compared with WT seed. However, induction of germination following a short pulse by R (666 nm) was not enhanced in the genotype transformed by oat phyA cDNA compared with the WT; neither did germination of the transgenic tobacco seed show an increased sensitivity to saturating pulses of light of longer wavelengths (666–730 nm). In seeds of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. which contained an introduced phytochrome-B-encoding cDNA, levels of dark germination were enhanced, consistent with mediation of response by phytochrome B-Pfr. The germination behaviour of Arabidopsis genotypes wich contained an introduced cDNA encoding phytochrome A, however, did not significantly differ from that of the WT.Abbreviations ABO seed transformed with Arabidopsis phyB - cDNA; CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - Pfr/Ptot phytochrome photoequilibrium - R red light - RBO seed transformed with rice phyB cDNA - RFR quantum ratio of red and far-red light - WL white light - WL + FR whitelight supplemented with far-red light - WT wild type The authors wish to thank R.D. Vierstra (Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) for providing the transgenic tobacco line, and M.T. Boylan, D. Wagner and P.H. Quail (U.C. Berkeley/USDA Plant Gene Expression Center, Albany, Calif. USA) for providing the transgenic Arabidopsis lines. The work presented in this paper was funded by grants from the Agricultural and Food Research Council (H.S., A.C.M., G.C.W.).  相似文献   

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