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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
A. Ritter  E. Wagner  M. G. Holmes 《Planta》1981,153(6):556-560
The spectral control of hypocotyl elongation in light-grown Chenopodium rubrum L. seedlings has been studied. The results showed that although the seedlings responded to changes in the quantity of combined red and far-red radiation, they were also very sensitive to changes in the quantity of blue radiation reaching the plant. Altering the proportion of red: far-red radiation in broad waveband white light caused marked differences in hypocotyl extension. Comparison of the responses of green and chlorophyll-free seedlings indicated no qualitative difference in the response to any of the light sources used, although photosynthetically incompetent plants were more sensitive to all wavelengths. Blue light was found to act primarily of a photoreceptor which is different from phytochrome. It is concluded that hypocotyl extension rate in vegetation shade is photoregulated by the quantity of blue light and the proportion of red: far-red radiation. In neutral shade, such as that caused by stones or overlying soil, hypocotyl extension appears to be regulated primarily by the quantity of light in the blue waveband and secondarily by the quantity of light in the red and far-red wavebands.Abbreviations B blue - FR far-red - k 1, k 2 rate constants for photoconverison of Pr to Pfr and Pfr to Pr, respective - k 1/k 1 +k 2= phytochrome photoequilibrium - k 1 +k 2= phytochrome cycling rate - Pr=R absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr=FR absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot Pr+Pfr - PAR photosynthetically active radiation = 400–700 nm - R red - WL white light  相似文献   

4.
D. C. Morgan  H. Smith 《Planta》1978,142(2):187-193
Chenopodium album seedlings were grown in light environments in which supplementary far-red light was mixed with white fluorescent light during various parts of the photoperiod. Both the logarithmic rate constant of stem extension and the leaf dry weight: stem dry weight ratio were linearly related to estimated phytochrome photoequilibrium () in each treatment regime. These data are taken to be indicative of a functional link between phytochrome and development in the green plant. A layer of chlorophyllous tissue only affected the linearity between calculated and the logarithmic stem extension rate at high chlorophyll concentrations, whilst even low concentrations-equivalent to the levels found in stem tissue-caused a significant shift in measured . End-of-day supplementary far-red (FR) light induced between 0–35 per cent of the response elicited by all-day supplementary FR, whilst daytime supplementary FR (with a white fluorescent light end-of-day treatment) induced approximately 90 per cent. The ecological significance of this difference is discussed with respect to shade detection.Paper 7 in the series The function of phytochrome in the natural environment [for paper 6 see McLaren, J.S., Smith, H., Plant, Cell and Environment 1, 61–67, 1978]  相似文献   

5.
Red light controls cell elongation in seedlings of rice (Oryza sativa L.) in a far-red-reversible manner (Nick and Furuya, 1993, Plant Growth Regul. 12, 195–206). The role of gibberellins and microtubules in the transduction of this response was investigated in the rice cultivars Nihon Masari (japonica type) and Kasarath (indica type). The dose dependence of mesocotyl elongation on applied gibberellic acid (GA3) was shifted by red light, and this shift was reversed by far-red light. In contrast, coleoptile elongation was found to be independent of exogenous GA3. Nevertheless, it was inhibited by red light, and this inhibition was reversed by far-red light. The content of the active gibberellin species GA1 and GA4 was estimated by radio-immunoassay. In the mesocotyl, the gibberellin content per cell was found to increase after irradiation with red light, and this increase was far-red reversible. Conversely, the cellular gibberellin content in japonica-type coleoptiles did not exhibit any significant light response. Microtubules reoriented from transverse to longitudinal arrays in response to red light and this reorientation could be reversed by subsequent far-red light in both the coleoptile and the mesocotyl. This movement was accompanied by changes in cell-wall birefringence, indicating parallel reorientations of cellulose deposition. The data indicate that phytochrome regulates the sensitivity of the tissue towards gibberellins, that gibberellin synthesis is controlled in a negative-feedback loop dependent on gibberellin effectiveness, and that at least two hormone-triggered signal chains are linked to the cytoskeleton in rice.Abbreviations D darkness - FR far-red light - GA3 gibberellic acid - GC-SIM gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring - R red light This work was supported by a grant of the Human Frontier Science Organization to P.N. Advice and organizational support by Prof. M. Furuya (Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory, Hatoyama, Japan) and Prof. N. Murofushi (Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of Tokyo, Japan) is gratefully acknowledged. Seeds of both rice cultivars were kindly provided by Dr. O. Yatou (Institute for Radiation Breeding, Hitachi-Ohmiya, Japan), and the antiGA1 Me-antiserum for the radio-immunoassays by Dr. I. Yamaguchi (Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of Tokyo, Japan).  相似文献   

6.
T. H. Attridge  M. Black  V. Gaba 《Planta》1984,162(5):422-426
An interaction is demonstrated between the effects of phytochrome and cryptochrome (the specific blue-light photoreceptor) in the inhibition of hypocotyl elongation of light-grown cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) cv. Ridge Greenline seedlings. At certain fluence rates of blue light the total inhibition response is greater than the sum of the separate responses to each photoreceptor. The threshold for response to blue light is reduced at least 30-fold by additional red-light irradiation. The synergistic effect is demonstrated for two different fluence rates of red light. Synergism is mediated by phytochrome in both the cotyledons and the hypocotyl.Abbreviations and symbols BL blue light - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light - photostationary state of phytochrome - c calculated   相似文献   

7.
Photocontrol of stem elongation in light-grown plants of Fuchsia hybrida   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
D. Vince-Prue 《Planta》1977,133(2):149-156
Stems of the caulescent long-day plant, Fuchsia hybrida cv Lord Byron, showed 2 types of response to light. In one, internode length was increased by far-red irradiation given at the end of an 8 h photoperiod: the response was no greater with prolonged exposure and was less when the start of far-red was delayed. The effect of far-red was reversible by a subsequent exposure to red light. Internode length was inversely proportional to the Pfr/P ratio established before entry to darkness and there was no evidence for loss of Pfr during a 16 h dark period. The inhibitory effect of Pfr acted at a relatively late stage of internode growth. With the development of successive internodes a second response appeared in which stems lengthened following prolonged daily exposures to red or far-red light, or mixtures of the two, or to brief breaks with red or white light. In these later internodes, a short exposure to far-red near the middle of the night was not reversible by red because red alone promoted elongation at this time. Internode length increased with increase in the daily duration of light and, when light was given throughout an otherwise dark period of 16 h, with increase in illuminance to a saturation value of 200 lx from tungsten lamps. Elongation increased as a linear function of decrease in photostationary state of phytochrome down to Pfr/P0.3; however, internodes were shorter in far-red light than in 25% red/red+far-red. It was concluded that stem length is a net response to two modes of phytochrome action. An inductive effect of Pfr inhibits a late stage in internode expansion, and a phytochrome reaction which operates only in light (and may involve pigment cycling) promotes an early stage of internode development. Stem elongation is thus a function both of the daily duration of light and its red/red+far-red content. The outgrowth of axillary buds was controlled by the first type of phytochrome action only.Abbreviations and symbols FR far red light - R red light - P phytochrome - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red light absorbing form - SD 8 h short days - LDP long-day plant - SDP short-day plant  相似文献   

8.
J. E. Hughes  E. Wagner 《Planta》1987,172(1):131-138
The effects of far-red light given against a background of white light on the stem-extension kinetics of three-week-old, light-grown Chenopodium album seedlings were investigated. Under white light alone, the stems (cotyledon-to-apex) extended almost exactly logarithmically with time. Under these conditions the increase in log [stem length in mm] per hour was approx. 3.7·10-3, equivalent to about 1% per h during both skoto-and photoperiods. Supplementary far-red given throughout each photoperiod massively stimulated extension. The calculated logarithmic extension rate, however, slowly returned to that of the controls, following an initial large increase. This is predicted by a model in which far-red light linearly increases the extension rate of individual internodes which arise at an exponentially increasing rate. The behaviour of the model is also consistent with critical experiments in which far-red was given as a pre-treatment or transiently, as well as with other published data. Far-red stimulation of logarithmic extension rate in successive photoperiods was closely and linearly correlated with calculated phytochrome photoequilibrium. Daily short periods of supplementary far-red were especially potent in accelerating extension; the plants seemed least responsive at the end of the photoperiod.Abbreviations FR supplementary far-red light - I stem length (mm) - LSER logarithmic stem extension rate - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - R:FR red:far-red fluence rate ratio - WL white light - c calculated phytochrome photoequilibrium  相似文献   

9.
Co-regulation Of ear growth and internode elongation in corn   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ear is the harvest part of corn (Zea mays L.) and we are interested in studying its growth and development in our effort in corn yield improvement. In our current study, we examined the relationship between ear growth and internode characteristics using different approaches. Correlations between stem growth rate and number of ears per plant (prolificacy) were assessed among several genotypes. Internode elongation of 2 genotypes was modified by plant hormones and by population density manipulations. Among the 7 genotypes examined that have different prolificacy levels, there was a general correlation of slower stem elongation at middle growth stages and larger ear number. When the internode elongation was enhanced by application of gibberellic acid (GA), ear growth was suppressed; and when a GA synthesis inhibitor uniconazole was applied at early stages, internode length was reduced and ear growth was promoted in terms of both ear size and visible ear number at silking stage. Higher population density caused longer internodes and fewer ears per plant and the effect of lower density was the opposite. Our results suggested that internode elongation in the middle section of corn plants was linked to suppression of ear development in corn.  相似文献   

10.
The metabolism and growth-promoting activity of gibberellin A20 (GA20) were compared in the internode-length genotypes of pea, na le and na Le. Gibberellin A29 and GA29-catabolite were the major metabolites of GA20 in the genotype na le. However, low levels of GA1, GA8 and GA8-catabolite were also identified as metabolites in this genotype, confirming that the le allele is a leaky mutation. Gibberellin A20 was approximately 20 to 30 times as active in promoting internode growth of genotype na Le as of genotype na le. However, the levels of the 3-hydroxylated metabolite of GA20, GA8 (2-hydroxy GA1), were similar for a given growth response in both genotypes. In each case a close linear relationship was observed between internode growth and the logarithm of GA8 levels. A similar relationship was found on comparing GA20 metabolism in the three genotypes le d, le and Le. The former mutation results in a more severe dwarf phenotype than the le allele (which has previously been shown to reduce the 3-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1). These results indicate that GA20 has negligible intrinsic activity and support the contention that GA1 is the only GA active per se in promoting stem growth in pea.Abbreviations GAn gibberellin An - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - HPLC high-pressure liquid chromatography  相似文献   

11.
Jorge J. Casal  Harry Smith 《Planta》1988,175(2):214-220
Extension growth of the first internode in fully de-etiolated mustard (Sinapis alba L.) seedlings (11–12.5 d old) is under the control of both the current phytochrome photoequilibrium (Pfr/P, ratio of the far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome to total phytochrome) and that established by short (<12 h) pretreatments. Plants were pretreated with either light pulses providing different calculated Pfr/P followed by dark incubations of different durations (a), or with a 12-h period of white light establishing different Pfr/P (b). After the pretreatments, the plants received either light pulses providing different Pfr/P, followed by dark incubations (c), or continuous white light with or without addtional far-red light (d). Thus, four experimental approaches were followed: (a)(c); (a)(d); (b)(c) and (b)(d). Extension growth during the second period (c or d) was not only affected by the current phytochrome status, but also by that established during the pretreatment period (a or b). The results show the existence of a long-term promotion of stem growth which persists after the end of the low Pfr/P pretreatment. This effect is different from the previously reported rapid effect of far-red light added to background white light as follows: (i) the duration of low Pfr/P required to effect a full response is longer (2.5 h); (ii) the duration of the promotion after returning to high Pfr/P is longer (approx. 24 h) and (iii) the locus of perception is mainly in the leaves, rather than the growing internode.Abbreviations FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pfr/P ratio between the FR-absorbing form and total phytochrome - R red light - WL white light  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Flowering of Chenopodium rubrum seedling plants was obtained in continuous light after application of fractions of a partially purified extract from leaves of flowering Maryland Mammoth tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). The stage of flowal differentiation was dependent on the age of the Chenopodium plants used for the bioassay. Apices of plants treated with the extract at the age of four or seven days showed an advanced branching of the meristem or the beginning of formation of a terminal flower; treatment with the extract of plants 12 d old resulted in rapid formation of flower buds in all assay plants. Non-treated control plants kept in continuous light remained fully vegetative. The effects of the extract on flowering were associated with pronounced growth effects. Floral differentiation was preceeded by elongation of the shoot apex. Extension of all axial organs occurred, while growth of leaves, including leaf primordia, was inhibited. The pattern of growth after application of the flower-inducing substance(s) did not resemble the effects of the known phytohormones, but showed some similarities to growth changes resulting from photoperiodic induction of flowering.  相似文献   

14.
Further study on the localization of abscisic acid (ABA) has been undertaken at the ultrastructural level in Chenopodium polyspermum L. Axillary-bud-bearing nodes on the main axis were fixed with soluble 1-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-3 ethyl carbodiimide, then postfixed with paraformaldehyde and embedded in Lowicryl K4M at-20° C. Ultrathin sections mounted on grids were successively incubated with rabbit anti-ABA antibodies and with gold-labelled goat anti-rabbit anti-bodies (40 nm particle size). Control sections treated with preimmune rabbit serum and ABA-preabsorbed antibodies were devoid of label. The background staining was very low with this technique. Quantitative analysis of the immunolabelling showed that two main sites of ABA accumulation could be defined: first, plastids in cortical cells and vascular parenchyma cells associated with sieve elements and xylem vessels; second, the cell cytoplasm and nucleus in the axillary bud tip and in procambial strands. In vascular bundles, the cambial cells showed no immunoreactivity. These observations support the hypothesis for the cytoplasmic synthesis of ABA which is subsequently trapped in plastids as cells mature.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - EDC 1-(3-dimethyl-aminopropyl)-3-ethyl carbodiimide - GAR 40 goat anti-rabbit antibodies labelled with colloidal gold of particle size 40 nm - IgG immunoglobulin G  相似文献   

15.
Phenylacetic acid (PAA) significantly stimulated the elongation of isolated Phaseolus vulgaris internodal segments and prevented the decline in acid invertase specific activity observed in segments incubated in the absence of growth substances. Unlike IAA, which stimulated both elongation and invertase activity over a very wide range of concentrations (<10-4 - 1 mol.m-3; optimum 10-2 mol.m-3), the response to PAA was restricted to a much narrower range of concentrations (3 × 10-2 - 1 mol.m-3; optimum ca. 1–2 × 10-1mol.m-3). At the optimum concentration of PAA, the stimulation of both responses was about 63–75% of that induced by the optimum concentration of IAA. The differences in the concentration range and magnitude of the responses to IAA and PAA were not due to differences in uptake of the two compounds. The stimulation of elongation by both compounds was prevented by 3.6 × 10-2mol.m-3 cycloheximide (CH), and acid invertase activites were greatly reduced compared with samples treated with growth substances alone. A saturating concentration of the specific auxin efflux carrier inhibitor N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) slightly promoted the growth of control segments, probably by reducing the loss of residual endogenous auxin to the incubation medium. The elongation induced by PAA at its optimum concentration was considerably greater than the elongation induced by NPA, indicating that PAA did not cause growth by preventing the loss of endogenous auxin from the segments. Elongation responses to combinations of IAA and PAA suggested that the compounds were acting additively and that they were affecting growth by the same mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
P. H. Quail  J. E. Hughes 《Planta》1977,133(2):169-177
The phosphotungstic acid-chromic acid (PTA-CrO3) stain, putatively specific for the plasma membrane of plants, has been used in an attempt to monitor the distribution of this membrane in a 20,000 x g particulate fraction from Cucurbita hypocotyl hooks. On discontinuous sucrose gradients, the relative distributions of the phytochrome and PTA-CrO3-positive vesicles present in this fraction appear to be correlated. When intact tissue is stained, however, other components, in addition to the plasma membrane, react positively to the stain. These components include prolamellar-body membranes, lipid droplets, and ribosomes. This lack of specificity calls into question the reliability of the technique for the unequivocal identification and accurate quantitation of plasma-membrane fragments in isolated particulate fractions. The present data do not, therefore, provide unambiguous evidence that phytochrome is associated with plasma membrane in tissue homogenates from Cucurbita.Abbreviations PTA-CrO3 phosphotungstate-chromate - RNP ribonucleoprotein  相似文献   

17.
Thomas Roitsch  Widmar Tanner 《Planta》1994,193(3):365-371
Photoautotrophic suspension-culture cells of Chenopodium rubrum L. were shifted to mixotrophic growth by adding glucose to investigate whether the activities of plant sugar transporters, as well as the expression of the corresponding genes, are regulated in response to sugars. The rate of d-glucose uptake was shown not to be affected by mixotrophic growth in the presence of d-glucose. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique was applied to amplify cDNA and genomic fragments from monosaccharide-carrier genes. Seven members of a monosaccharide-carrier family were identified of which three were found to be expressed in the suspension-culture cells. The expression of the monosaccharide-carrier genes was independent of the presence of d-glucose.Abbreviation PCR polymerase chain reaction We would like to thank Michaela Bittner, Rainer Ehneß and Monika Kammerer for skillful technical assistance and S. Buchhauser and H. Hallmer for photographic work. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 43) and by Fonds der Chemischen Industrie.  相似文献   

18.
V. Gaba  M. Black 《Planta》1985,164(2):264-271
The control by phytochrome of hypocotyl elongation of light-grown Cucumis sativus L. after a white-light period was examined. The farred-absorbing form of phytochrome inhibits hypocotyl elongation. The response to phytochrome photostationary state () is not linear; all values of from 0.004 to 0.13 promote growth maximally, in the range of values of from 0.13 to 0.22 there is a linear growth response, between values of of 0.22 and 0.35 there is again no differential effect, and for values above 0.35 there is a strong (near linear) effect of on elongation. A kinetic examination of events following the white-light period shows that the major recovery from the photoperiod requires 8.5 h of darkness. End-of-day far-red treatment produces a very different response pattern, with a minor growth stimulation within 28 min of treatment followed by a major effect after 80 to 90 min. Three hours after far-red treatment there is a transient decline in growth rate which persists for about 2 h. Over the whole time course there is a great stimulation of growth rate compared with the controls. A similar growth-rate pattern also occurs if the end-of-day is 0.48, although the magnitude of the growth stimulation is less. Two components are affected by end-of-day , namely the time at which growth recovers and the subsequent growth rate. In the long term, the latter accounts for most of the differences in elongation growth. The dark recovery when only the hypocotyl is irradiated requires 4 h, but end-of-day far-red treatment reduces this to about 1.5 h. The persistence of the far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome for many hours in darkness in these light-grown plants is also demonstrated.Abbreviations and symbols D darkness - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light - WL white light (from fluorescent lamps) - photostationary state of phytochrome - c calculated   相似文献   

19.
The turgor pressure and water relation parameters were determined in single photoautotrophically grown suspension cells and in individual cells of intact leaves of Chenopodium rubrum using the miniaturized pressure probe. The stationary turgor pressure in suspension-cultured cells was in the range of betwen 3 and 5 bar. From the turgor pressure relaxation process, induced either hydrostatically (by means of the pressure probe) or osmotically, the halftime of water exchange was estimated to be 20±10 s. No polarity was observed for both ex- and endosmotic water flow. The volumetric elastic modulus, , determined from measurements of turgor pressure changes, and the corresponding changes in the fractional cell volume was determined to be in the range of between 20 and 50 bar. increases with increasing turgor pressure as observed for other higher plant and algal cells. The hydraulic conductivity, Lp, is calculated to be about 0,5–2·10–6 cm s–1 bar–1. Similar results were obtained for individual leaf cells of Ch. rubrum. Suspension cells immobilized in a cross-linked matrix of alginate (6 to 8% w/w) revealed the same values for the half-time of water exchange and for the hydraulic conductivity, Lp, provided that the turgor pressure relaxation process was generated hydrostatically by means of the pressure probe. Thus, it can be concluded that the unstirred layer from the immobilized matrix has no effect on the calculation of Lp from the turgor pressure relaxation process, using the water transport equation derived for a single cell surrounded by a large external volume. By analogy, this also holds true for Lp-values derived from turgor pressure changes generated by the pressure probe in a single cell within the leaf tissue. The fair similarity between the Lp-values measured in mesophyll cells in situ and mesophyll-like suspension cells suggests that the water transport relations of a cell within a leaf are not fundamentally different from those measured in a single cell.  相似文献   

20.
U. Kutschera 《Planta》1990,181(3):316-323
The relationship between growth and increase in cell-wall material (wall synthesis) was investigated in hypocotyls of sunflower seedlings (Helianthus annuus L.) that were either grown in the dark or irradiated with continuous white light (WL). The peripheral three to four cell layers comprised 30–50% of the entire wall material of the hypocotyl. The increase in wall material during growth in the dark and WL, respectively, was larger in the inner tissues than in the peripheral cell layers. The wall mass per length decreased continuously, indicating that wall thinning occurs during growth of the hypocotyl. When dark-grown seedlings were transfered to WL, a 70% inhibition of growth was observed, but the increase in wall mass was unaffected. Likewise, the composition of the cell walls (cellulose, hemicellulose, pectic substances) was not affected by WL irradiation. Upon transfer of dark-grown seedlings into WL a drastic increase in wall thickness and a concomitant decrease in cell-wall plasticity was measured. The results indicate that cell-wall synthesis and cell elongation are independent processes and that, as a result, WL irradiation of etiolated hypocotyls leads to a thickening and mechanical stiffening of the cell walls.  相似文献   

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