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1.
The role of environment on the dwarfing (short internode) phenomenon of apple (Malus domestisca Borkh.) was investi gated and defined in controlled environmental chambers. Orchard-grown very dwarf, dwarf and semi-dwarf trees obtained by natural sibcrossing of spur-type cv. Golden Delicious and cv. Delicious, as well as standard cv. Golden Delicious, were propagated via in vitro techniques. Growth was rapid and none of the 4 types exhibited dwarf-like characteristics when grown at constant 27°C with 12, 14 or 16 h daylengths. Standard and very dwarf plants grew at nearly the same rate at constant 30°C, whereas growth nearly ceased on both types at constant 35°C after 7 days. Dwarf and very dwarf plants responded differently from standard and semi-dwarf plants when grown under alternating (ramped) night/day temperatures (15 or 20°C night ramped up to a daytime maximum over 8 h of 23, 28, 33 or 38°C, held for 2 h and then ramped down over 5 h to the night temperature). As the night/maximum day temperature differentia) increased from 0 to 23° under the ramping environments, growth of dwarf plants decreased markedly as compared to standard plants. When the same night/maximum day temperature differential occurred, the effect on decreasing shoot length was greater at the higher (20°C) night temperature. Increasing maximum day temperatures under the ramped environment also reduced leaf area plant?1 but did not markedly affect leaf number, resulting in short internodes. When a period of constant temperature was followed by ramped temperatures or vice versa, the sequence of constant vs ramped environments made little difference in the final growth of the 4 plant types. The data point to high temperature as the major factor for causing dwarfing of the sensitive plant types. Increasing the differential between night and maximum day temperature resulted in short internode. dwarf plants with small leaves similar to orchard-grown dwarf trees.  相似文献   

2.
The role of gibberellins (GAs) in photoperiodic control of leaf elongation in Poa pratensis was studied by both application of exogenous GAs and analysis of endogenous GAs. Leaf elongation was strongly increased under long day (LD, 24 h) conditions at both 9 and 21°C, leaf length at 9°C LD being similar to that in plants grown in short days (SD, 8 h) at 21°C. However, even at 21°C leaf elongation was enhanced by LD. Exogenous GA1 could completely compensate for LD at both 9 and 21°C. Gibberellins A20, A19 and A44 could also partly replace LD, but they were significantly less active than GA1, GA53 was inactive when applied to plants grown at 9°C in SD and exhibited only marginal activity at 9°C LD and 21°C SD. The total level of GAs of the early 13-hydroxylation pathway (A53, A44, A19, A20 and A1) increased rapidly when plants were transferred from SD to LD at 9°C. After transfer from 9 to 21°C, there was an increase in GA levels at both LD and SD, followed by a decrease under LD conditions. In all cases, GA19 was the predominant GA, accounting for 60 to 80% of the analysed GAs. Levels of the bioactive GA1 were low and increased transiently by LD four days after transfer from SD to LD. At both temperatures, the ratio GA19 to GA20 and GA20 to GA1 at 9°C was enhanced by LD compared with SD. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that photoperiodic regulation of leaf elongation in Poa pratensis is GA-mediated, and they indicate a photoperiodic control of oxidation of GA53 to GA44 and GA19 to GA20, and perhaps also of 3β-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1.  相似文献   

3.
Apple (Malus domestica Borkh.) trees were propagated by budding from selected fully grown hybrids that ranged in height from 1.5 to 8 m. The growth and development of the selected budded trees after 7 years in the orchard was similar to that of the parent trees. Additional grafting studies showed that the dwarfism was not associated with the roots. Differences in photosynthetic activity and associated processes were not related to the size difference between tissue culture-propagated orchard-grown standard cv. Golden Delicious and dwarf hybrid trees. Applications of GA3 did not stimulate elongation of shoots of dwarf trees. Shoots of both standard and dwarf trees started to develop in mid-April when they contained nearly the same amounts of GA1, GA3 and GA8, but standard shoots contained higher concentrations of GA19, GA20 and GA29. On 2 June standard shoots were almost three times the length of dwarf shoots, but the number of leaves and area per leaf were nearly the same. The relative amounts of GAs on 12 May and 2 June for both plant types were similar to those on 20 April, except that GA19, GA20, GA1 and GA29 levels had declined. Gibberellin levels in standard shoots declined further between 2 and 22 June, after which there was no further shoot elongation or production of new leaves. Between 2 June and the end of the growing season, when summer temperatures were high, dwarf shoots continued to elongate slowly and to develop new leaves, which expanded little. During this time, the GA19 content of dwarf shoots nearly doubled, whereas the amounts of GA20, GA1, GA29 and GA8 declined. By the end of the season, standard shoots were 40 cm in length with 20 leaves and dwarf shoots were 28 cm in length, but with 36 leaves. High summer temperatures appear to induce loss of GA-responsiveness in orchard-grown dwarf trees and to cause a reduced rate of conversion of GA19 to GA20 in these genotypes.  相似文献   

4.
Stem elongation in Fuchsia × hybrida was influenced by cultivation at different day and night temperatures or in different light qualities. Internode elongation of plants grown at a day (25°C) to night (15°C) temperature difference (DIF+10) in white light was almost twofold that of plants grown at the opposite temperature regime (DIF−10). Orange light resulted in a threefold stimulation of internode elongation compared with white light DIF−10. Surprisingly, internode elongation in orange light was similar for plants grown at DIF−10 and DIF+10. Flower development was accelerated at DIF−10 compared with DIF+10 in both white and orange light. To examine whether the effects of DIF and light quality on shoot elongation were related to changes in gibberellin metabolism or plant sensitivity to gibberellins (GAs), the stem elongation responses of paclobutrazol-treated plants to applied gibberellins were determined. In the absence of applied gibberellins paclobutrazol (>0.32 μmol plant−1) strongly retarded shoot elongation. This inhibition was nullified by the application of about 10–32 nmol of GA1, GA4, GA9, GA15, GA19, GA20, GA24, or GA44. The results are discussed in relation to possible effects of DIF and light quality on endogenous gibberellin levels and gibberellin sensitivity of fuchsia and their effects on stem elongation. Received October 4, 1997; accepted December 17, 1997  相似文献   

5.
High temperature has been implicated as the major factor responsible for dwarfing of selected apple ( Malus domestica Borkh.) trees of a hybrid population of cv. Goldspur Delicious x cv. Redspur Delicious. Dwarf plants grew only 2.2 cm in 63 days under a ramped temperature regime (night 15°C, day ramped up to 38°C, held for 2 h and ramped down to 15°C—14 h daylength), whereas semi-dwarf plants grew 26.3 cm. At a constant 27°C (14 h daylength), both dwarf and semi-dwarf plants grew 26.3 cm. At a constant 27°C (14 h daylength), both dwarf and semi-dwarf plants grew nearly 50 cm. The gibberellin biosynthesis inhibitor, paclobutrazol, retarded growth of semi-dwarf plants in both ramped and constant environments and dwarf plants in the constant 27°C environment. It did not further reduce the size of dwarf plants growing under the ramped regime. Gibberellin (GA3) treatment reversed the inhibition of growth caused by paclobutrazol for all plants except it did not restore growth of dwarf plants in the ramped environment. These data suggest that neither pacobutrazoltreated nor untreated dwarf plants growing in the ramped environment (or in the orchard during hot summer months) are able to respond to GA3. In constrast, GA3 was utilized by the paclobutrazol-inhibited dwarf plants growing at constant 27°C, enabling shoot elongation to take place. It appears that high temperature may have caused alterations in GA target tissues in dwarf plants so that they no longer had the capacity to respond to GA.  相似文献   

6.
In near-isogenic lines of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Maris Huntsman) grown at 20° C under long days the reduced-height genes, Rht1 (semi-dwarf) and Rht3 (dwarf) reduced the rate of extension of leaf 2 by 12% and 52%, respectively, compared with corresponding rht (tall) lines. Lowering the growing temperature from 20° to 10° C reduced the rate of linear extension of leaf 2 by 2.5-fold (60% reduction) in the rht3 line but by only 1.6-fold (36% reduction) in the Rht3 line. For both genotypes, the duration of leaf expansion was greater at the lower temperature so that final leaf length was reduced by only 35% in the rht3 line and was similar in the Rht3 line at both temperatures. Seedlings of the rht3 (tall) line growing at 20° C responded positively to root-applied gibberellin A1 (GA1) in the range 1–10 μM GA1; there was a linear increase in sheath length of leaf 1 whereas the Rht3 (dwarf) line remained unresponsive. Gibberellins A1, 3, 4, 8, 19, 20, 29, 34, 44 and 53 were identified by full-scan gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in aseptically grown 4-d-old shoots of the Rht3 line. In 12-d-old seedlings grown at 20° C, there were fourfold and 24-fold increases in the concentration of GA1 in the leaf expansion zone of Rht1 and Rht3 lines, respectively, compared with corresponding rht lines. Although GA3 was present at a similar level to GA1 in the rht3 (tall) line it accumulated only fivefold in the Rht3 (dwarf) line. The steady-state pool sizes of endogenous GAs were GA19 ? GA20 = GA1 in the GA-responsive rht3 line whereas in the GA non-responsive Rht3 line the content of GA19≈ GA20 ? GA1. It is proposed that one of the consequences of GA1 action is suppression of GA19-oxidase activity such that the conversion of GA19 to GA20 becomes a rate-limiting step on the pathway to GA1 in GA-responsive lines. In the GA-non-responsive Rht lines it is suggested that GA19 oxidase is not downregulated to the same extent and GA1 accumulates before the next rate-limiting step on the pathway, its 2β-hydroxylation to GA8. The steady-state pool sizes of GA19, 20, 1, 3 and 8 were similar in developmentally equivalent tissues of the rht3 (tall) line growing at 10° C and 20° C despite a 2.5-fold difference in the rate of leaf expansion. In contrast, in the Rht3 (dwarf) line, the extent of accumulation of GA1 reflected the severity of the phenotype at the two temperatures with slower growing tissues accumulating less, not more, GA1. These results are interpreted as supporting the proposed model of regulation of the GA-biosynthetic pathway rather than previous suggestions that GA1 accumulates in GA-insensitive dwarfs as a consequence of reduced growth rates.  相似文献   

7.
Eight rapid-cyclingBrassica genotypes differing in height were treated with gibberellins (GAs) by syringe application to the shoot tip. The height of two genotypes ofBrassica napus, Bn5-2 and Bn5-8, andB. rapa mutants,dwarf 1 (dwf1) anddwarf 2 (dwf2), was unaffected by exogenous GA3 at dosages up to 0.1 μg/plant, a level which increased shoot elongation of normal genotypes. Thus, these dwarf mutants are “GA-insensitive.” In contrast to theB. napus dwarfs, twoB. rapa mutants,rosette (ros), anddormant (dor), elongated following GA3 application. The dwarfros was most sensitive, responding to applications as low as 1 ng GA3/plant. Furthermore,ros also responded to GA1 and some of its precursors with decreasing efficacy: GA3>ent-kaurenoic acid ≥GA1>GA20≥GA19=GA44≥GA53. Endogenous GAs were measured by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring using [2H2]GA internal standards for calibration, from shoots of the GA-insensitive genotypes Bn5-2, Bn5-8 which contained theB. napus mutantdwarf 1, and from a normal genotype Bn5-1. Concentrations of GA1 and GA20 averaged 3.2- and 4.6-fold higher, respectively, and GA19 levels also tended to be higher in the dwarfs than in the normal genotype.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of thermo- and photoperiodicity on elongation growth and on endogenous level of gibberellins (GAs) in Begonia x hiemalis during various phases of the day-night cycle have been studied. Plant tissue was harvested during the day and night cycle after temperature and photoperiodic treatments and analyzed for endogenous GAs using combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Elongation growth increased when the difference between day and night temperature (DIF = DT − NT) increased from a negative value (−9.0 and −4.5°C) to zero and with increasing photoperiod from 8 to 16 h. When applied to the youngest apical leaf, gibberellins A1, A4, and A9 increased the elongation of internodes and petioles. GA4 had a stronger effect on elongation growth than GA1 and GA9. In relative values, the effect of these GAs decreased when DIF increased from −9 to 0°C. The time of applying the GAs during a day and night cycle had no effect on the growth responses. In general, endogenous levels of GA19 and GA20 were higher under negative DIF compared with zero DIF. The level of endogenous GA1 in short day (SD)-grown plants was higher under zero DIF than under negative DIF, but this relationship did not appear in long day (LD)-grown plants. The main effects of photoperiod seem to be a higher level of GA19 and GA1 at SD compared with LD, whereas GA20 and GA9 show the opposite response to photoperiod. No significant differences in endogenous level of GA1, GA9, GA19, and GA20 were found for various time points during the diurnal day and night cycle. Endogenous GA20 was higher in petiole and leaf compared with stem, whereas there were no differences of GA1, GA9, and GA19 between plant parts. No clear relationship was found between elongation of internodes and petioles and levels of endogenous GAs. Received December 26 1996; accepted July 1, 1997  相似文献   

9.
The effect of day/night temperature regimes on stem elongation and on the content of endogenous gibberellins (GAs) in vegetatively propagated plants of Campanula isophylla cv. Hvit have been studied. Compared with a constant temperature regime at 18°C (18/18°C), stem and internode elongation was enhanced significantly by a combination of high day/low night temperature (21/15°C) and inhibited by an opposite regime (15/21°C). Gibberellins A1, A19, A44, A53, and A97 were identified as endogenous components in Campanula. (GA97 was earlier referred to as 2-OH-GA53.) Quantitative analysis of the endogenous GAs indicates that temperature regimes that stimulate elongation growth are accompanied by an increase in the level of GA1, GA19, and GA44. On the other hand, in plants grown under conditions that reduced stem elongation growth, there was an increased level of GA97.Abbreviations DIF difference between day temperature and night temperature - GA gibberellin - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass chromatography - SPE solid phase extraction - TMS trimethylsilyl - MSTFA N-methyl-N-TMS-trifluoroacetamide - KRI Kovats retention index - SIM selected ion monitoring - D2 deuterated  相似文献   

10.
Endogenous gibberellins (GAs) were extracted from flushing (expanding) vegetative buds of river alder (Alnus tenuifolia), European white birch (Betula pendula), and aspen (Populus tremuloides) and identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with full scans and/or selected ion monitoring. Five 13-hydroxylated GAs were detected from the three trees: GA1, 8, and 20 from alder, GA1, 8, 19 and 20 from aspen and GA1, 8, 19, 20, and 29 from birch. Thirteen other GAs previously detected in Salix or common in other plants were specifically investigated but not detected. The presence of GA1, its probable precursors GA19 and GA20, and its probable metabolite, GA8, suggests that the early 13-hydroxylated GA biosynthetic pathway is dominant in vegetative buds of these trees. Abundant endogenous GAs of these trees are similar to the principal GAs of willows (various Salix spp.) and poplars (various Populus spp.). This suggests similarities in the GA physiology and is consistent with a common role of GA1 as a regulator of shoot growth in woody angiosperms.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

Gibberellins (GAs) are well known for plant growth promotion. GAs production by fungi has received little attention, although substantial work has been carried out on other aspects of plant growth-promoting fungi (PGPF). We investigated GAs production and plant growth-promoting capacity of an endophytic fungus isolated from the roots of soil grown soybean plants. The endophytic fungus is reported as GAs producer and as PGPF for the first time in this study. Nine endophytic isolates were collected from the roots of soybean, and culture filtrates (CFs) obtained from their pure cultures were screened on Waito-C, a dwarf rice cultivar, for the presence of GAs. Of these, seven fungal isolates promoted shoot length as compared to control (distilled water), while one inhibited it. Three fungal isolates were selected on the basis of higher shoot elongation as compared to wild type Gibberella fujikuroi, which was used as positive control. The growth-prompting capacity of selected fungal isolates SB5-1, SB3-2, and SB3-3 was bio-assayed on soybean cv. Hwangkeumkong. Fungal isolate SB5-1 provided maximum plant height (31.6 cm), shoot length (21.1 cm), whole plant fresh biomass (2.41 g), shoot fresh biomass (1.99 g), and leaf area (24.37 cm2). The CF of isolate SB5-1 was analyzed for the presence of GAs, and it was found that all physiologically active GAs were present (GA1, 0.15 ng/ml, GA3, 1.2 ng/ml, GA4, 7.37 ng/ml, and GA7, 3.18 ng/ml) in conjunction with physiologically inactive GA5, GA9, GA15, GA19, GA20, and GA24. The fungal isolate SB5-1 was identified as a new strain of Cephalotheca sulfurea through molecular and phylogenetic approaches.  相似文献   

12.
The levels of gibberellin A1 (GA1), GA20, GA19, GA8, GA29 and GA81 (2-epiGA29) were measured in tall (L-) and dwarf (ll) sweet-pea plants grown in darkness and in light. In both environments the apical portions of dwarf plants contained less GA1; GA8 and GA19, but more GA20, GA29, and GA81 than did those of tall plants. It is concluded that the partial block in 3β-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1 is imposed by allele l in darkness as well as in the light. Furthermore, darkness does not appear to enhance elongation in sweet pea by increasing GA1 levels. The reduction of the pool size of GA19 in dwarf plants supports recent theories on the regulation of GA biosynthesis, formulated on the basis of observations in monocotyledonous species. Darkness results in decreased GA20, GA29, and GA81 levels in the apical portions of tall and dwarf plants and possible reasons for this are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
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   

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.
Abstract. Factors underlying the process of photosynthetic acclimation to temperature were investigated for the shrub Nerium oleander L. Ramets of a single clone were grown under day/night temperature regimes of 20°C/15°C or 45°C/32°C. Plants grown at the lower temperature regime possessed rates of photosynthesis twice that of the high-temperature grown plants when CO2 fixation was measured at 20°C. In contrast, the plants grown at the high-temperature regime had twice the rate of CO2 fixation of the 20°C/l 5°C-grown plants at a measurement temperature of 45° C. It was determined that the ability to acclimate to changes in temperature regime was present in fully mature leaves. A reciprocal transfer of plants between the two growth regimes resulted in the appearance of the CO2 fixation characteristics appropriate to the new growth temperature after 12–14d. The response of CO2 fixation to light, temperature, and CO2 partial pressure and the temperature responses of soluble and membrane-bound photosynthetic enzyme systems were analysed to determine which components might be responsible for the superior photosynthetic performance of the 20°C/I5°C-grown plants at 20°C, and the enhanced high-temperature stability of the 45°C/32°C plants. The measured photosynthetic capacity of the 20°C/15°C plants could not be attributed to gross morphological, stomatal, or other physical changes, or to a general increase in the concentration of components of the photosynthetic process. Only a single enzyme, Fru-P2 phosphatase, was affected to an extent similar to that of photosynthesis. The enhanced thermal stability of the 45°C/32°C plants may be attributed primarily to an enhanced stability of the chloroplast membrane-bound enzymatic activities and the stability of the photosynthetic carbon metabolism enzymes which require lighl for activation.  相似文献   

16.
Seeds from heavily fruiting (on-year), mature untreated, and paclobutrazol-treated apple trees (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Spartan) were sampled in mid-June 1987, mid-July 1987, and mid-July 1990. After seeds were freeze-dried, gibberellins (GAs) were extracted, purified, and fractionated via C18 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Nine GAs (GA1, GA3, GA4, GA7, GA8, GA9, GA19, GA20, and GA53) were quantified by the use of deuterated GA internal standards. Paclobutrazol trunk drench treatments reduced vegetative shoot elongation in the seasons that seeds were sampled by 55% or more. Between June 17, 1987 and July 15, 1987, the dry weight of seeds from both untreated and treated trees increased about 2.5 times and there were reductions, on a per seed basis, of GA4 in seeds from both untreated and treated trees, of GA7 in seeds from treated trees, and of GA9 in seeds from untreated trees. However, GA9 increased in seeds from treated trees. Changes in levels of some of the early-13-hydroxylation pathway GAs (GA15 GA3, GA8, GA19, GA20, and GA53) also occurred during the month. For mid-July harvested seeds, the pattern, with some exceptions, was that 2 years after paclobutrazol treatment (1987), levels of early-13-hydroxylation pathway GAs in seeds from treated trees were lower compared to controls but after 5 years (1990) their levels tended to increase. For the non-13-hydroxylated GAs (GA4, GA7, and GA9), 2 years after paclobutrazol treatment, GA4 levels were equal in seeds from untreated and treated trees, GA7 decreased in seeds from treated trees compared with controls, but GA9 levels increased. Levels of these three GAs were higher in seeds from treated trees 5 years after treatment (1990) but levels of GA4, GA7, and GA9 dramatically increased in seeds from treated trees 4 years after treatment (1989), as we previously reported.  相似文献   

17.
Eight rapid-cyclingBrassica genotypes differing in height were treated with gibberellins (GAs) by syringe application to the shoot tip. The height of two genotypes ofBrassica napus, Bn5-2 and Bn5-8, andB. rapa mutants,dwarf 1 (dwf1) anddwarf 2 (dwf2), was unaffected by exogenous GA3 at dosages up to 0.1 g/plant, a level which increased shoot elongation of normal genotypes. Thus, these dwarf mutants are GA-insensitive. In contrast to theB. napus dwarfs, twoB. rapa mutants,rosette (ros), anddormant (dor), elongated following GA3 application. The dwarfros was most sensitive, responding to applications as low as 1 ng GA3/plant. Furthermore,ros also responded to GA1 and some of its precursors with decreasing efficacy: GA3>ent-kaurenoic acid GA1>GA20GA19=GA44GA53. Endogenous GAs were measured by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring using [2H2]GA internal standards for calibration, from shoots of the GA-insensitive genotypes Bn5-2, Bn5-8 which contained theB. napus mutantdwarf 1, and from a normal genotype Bn5-1. Concentrations of GA1 and GA20 averaged 3.2- and 4.6-fold higher, respectively, and GA19 levels also tended to be higher in the dwarfs than in the normal genotype.  相似文献   

18.
Stem segments taken from Avena sativa plants grown at 10°, 20° or 30° varied in their phospholipid composition depending on the growth temperature; as temperature was lowered, there was a shift towards a greater proportion of unsaturated fatty acids. A significant increase was observed in the concentration of linolenic acid (18:3) as growth temperature was lowered. Although prolonged treatment of oat plants with GA3 produced marked changes in phospholipid composition of stem segments, these changes did not always accompany the GA3-induced growth response of segments. Treatment of stem segments with GA3 for only 20 hr produced a significant growth response with little or no effect on phospholipid composition over this time. The data support the hypothesis that GA3-induced growth in Avena stem segments can occur without a concomitant change in phospholipid composition.  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 application of gibberellins (GA) reduces the difference in stem elongation observed under a low day (DT) and high night temperature (NT) combination (negative DIF) compared with the opposite regime, a high DT/low NT (positive DIF). The aim of this work was to investigate possible thermoperiodic effects on GA metabolism and tissue sensitivity to GA by comparing the response to exogenously applied GA (in particular, GA1 and GA3) in pea plants (Pisum sativum cv. Torsdag) grown under contrasting DIF. Control plants not treated with growth inhibitors or additional GA were 38% shorter under negative (DT/NT 13/21°C) than positive DIF (DT/NT 21/13°C) because of shorter internodes. Additional GA1 or GA3 decreased the difference between positive and negative DIF. In pea plants dwarfed with paclobutrazol, which inhibits GA biosynthesis at an early step, the response to GA1 was reduced more strongly by negative compared with positive DIF than the response to GA3. The induced stem elongation by GA19 and GA20 did not deviate significantly from the response to GA1. Plants treated with prohexadione-calcium, an inhibitor of both the production and the inactivation of GA1, grew equally tall under the two temperature regimes in response to both GA1 and GA3. We hypothesize that the reduced response to GA1 compared with GA3 in paclobutrazol-treated plants grown under negative DIF is caused by a higher rate of 2β-hydroxylation of GA1 into GA8 under negative than positive DIF. This contributes to lower levels of GA1 and consequently shorter stems and internodes in pea plants grown under negative than positive DIF. Differences in tissue sensitivity to GA alone cannot account for this specific thermoperiodic effect on stem elongation. Received May 28, 1998; accepted May 29, 1998  相似文献   

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