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1.
Evans LT  Heide OM  King RW 《Plant physiology》1986,80(4):1025-1029
The semidian (~12 h) periodicity in the effect of far-red (FR) interruptions of the light period preceding inductive darkness on flowering in Pharbitis nil appears to be mediated by phytochrome: (a) promotion by interruptions 2 hours before inductive darkness (−2 hours) and inhibition at −8 hours are greater the higher the proportion of FR/R+FR during the interruption; (b) brief FR exposures followed by darkness are even more effective than FR throughout; (c) the effect of brief FR is reversed by subsequent R; (d) R interruptions of an FR background are most promotive at −8 hours, when FR is most inhibitory. Promotive FR interruptions at −2 or −14 hours shorten the critical dark period whereas inhibitory FR interruptions at −8 hours lengthen it. We conclude that the semidian rhythm is controlled by a `timing pool' of phytochrome FR absorbing form (Pfr) which disappears rapidly in darkness: four different estimates from our experiments indicate that Pfr was reduced to the level set by FR within 20 to 45 minutes in darkness. However, flowering may also be influenced by a `metabolic pool' of Pfr with a delayed loss in darkness, the time of which can be advanced or retarded by shifting the semidian rhythm.  相似文献   

2.
There is a semidian (≈12 h) rhythm in the flowering response of the short-day plant Pharbitis nil Choisy following 90 min exposure to either far-red light/darkness or a temperature drop (27 °C to 12 °C) given at various times in constant conditions before an inductive dark period. This semidian rhythmic response to the temperature-drop pretreatments in the light is also evident through the inductive dark period without change of phase. Furthermore, those pretreatments which increase flowering also advance the time of maximum sensitivity to red light (R) interruptions of the dark period by up to 1.5 h and shorten the critical night length. Conversely, pretreatments which reduce flowering delay the time of maximum R inhibition by up to 1.5 h and increase the critical night length by the same amount. However the phase of a circadian rhythm of flowering response had no effect on either the time of maximum R inhibition or the critical night length. Thus, the semidian rhythm determines both the time of maximum R inhibition and the critical night length in Pharbitis. Received: 8 November 1997 / Accepted: 7 January 1998  相似文献   

3.
Experiments were carried out to determine whether a semidian (12 h) rhythm in flowering response operates in Pharbitis nil as the basis for photoperiodic time measurement. The effect of 5 min far-red light followed by 85 min dark (FRD) given 4, 8,14 and 22 h before the end of a 48 h photoperiod on night-break timing and critical night length was determined. When given 4 h before the end of a 48 h photoperiod, an interruption with FRD advanced the phase of the circadian rhythm in the night-break inhibition of flowering. In contrast, earlier interruptions of the photoperiod had no effect on the phase of the rhythm. The critical night length was modified by FRD given 4 h (shortened) or 8 h (lengthened) before the end of the photo-period; when given at other times FRD did not alter the critical night length. The results are discussed in relation to the basis for photoperiodic timekeeping, with particular reference to suggestions for the involvement of a semidian rhythm. A circadian model based on the concept of limit cycles is described.  相似文献   

4.
Heide OM  King RW  Evans LT 《Plant physiology》1986,80(4):1020-1024
Evidence is presented of an endogenous rhythm in flowering response to far-red (FR) irradiation, with a period of about 12 h (hence semidian rhythm), which persists through at least three cycles in constant conditions of continuous light at 27°C and has a marked influence on the flowering response in Pharbitis nil to a subsequent inductive dark period. The phase of the rhythm is not influenced by real time nor by the time from imbibition or from the beginning of the light period. Rather, it is fed forward from the beginning of the FR interruption to the beginning of the inductive dark period. The period of the rhythm is not affected by irradiance but is longer at cooler temperature. When there are two FR interruptions during the preceding light period, it is primarily the later one which determines the phase of the rhythm, although some interactions are evident. There appears to be an abrupt rephasing of the rhythm at the beginning of the inductive dark period. No overt rhythms which could be used as “clock hands” for the semidian rhythm were detected in photosynthesis, stomatal opening, or translocation.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract Flowering of Pharbitis nil after an inductive dark period is greatly influenced by far-red (FR) irradiation during the preceding light period. The response to FR is rhythmic in otherwise constant conditions, and the period of the oscillation is approximately 12 h (i.e. semidian). The rhythm also appears to operate under daily light-dark cycles. The expression of this novel rhythm depends on the time from the beginning of FR pretreatment to the onset of the inductive dark period. The cotyledons are the site of response to both the pretreatment and inductive darkness, and both these conditions must be perceived by the same cotyledon.  相似文献   

6.
Under the conditions applied in our laboratory 4 1/2 days old plants ofChenopodium rubrum require 2–3 photoperiodic cycles for maximal flowering response, whereas 2 1/2 days old plants are able to flower after having obtained a single inductive cycle. The period length of the free-running rhythm of flowering observed in 2 1/2 days old plants after a single transfer from light to darkness is 30h and the first peak of flowering occurs at about hour 12 in darkness. When a cycle consisting of 16h darkness and 8h light or of 8h darkness and 8h light precedes the long dark period the rhythm is rephased. Rephasing is greater when the light commenced to act on the positive slope of the first peak of the free running rhythm than when it impinged on the negative slope. With an 8h interruption of darkness by light rhythm phase is controlled by the light-on, as well as by the light-off signal. Feeding 0.4 M glucose during the long period of darkness enhanced the amplitude of the flowering response and, moreover, substituted for one photoperiodic cycle.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The possibility that phytochrome is involved in the promotion of flowering by far-red light was investigated. The addition of far-red (FR) to a day extension with red (R) light promotes inflorescence initiation in Lolium. A 2-hour interruption with darkness also promoted flowering compared with the uninterrupted red light control; apex length was further increased by a 10-minute FR irradiation given before the 2-hour dark interruption and was decreased by 10-minutes of R light given in the middle: both FR promotion and R inhibition were reversed by R and FR respectively. Apex length increased approximately linearly with increasing duration of dark interruption up to at least 2 1/2 hours. When varying ratios of R:FR light were substituted for a 2-hour dark period, apex length was increasingly depressed as the % R was increased above 25%; no difference between 25% R/75% FR and 100% FR could be detected. Apex length was inversely linearly related to the calculated [Pfr]/[P] ratios above about 40% Pfr.FR promoted flowering when given during a 5-hour interruption of a day extension with R light but, between 0.25 and 0.90 J m2 s-1, there was no effect of intensity of FR; at 0.11 J m-2 s-1 apex length was shorter than at 0.25 J m-2 s-1 but longer than in darkness. When the duration of FR (from the beginning of a dark interruption of a day extension with R) was varied, apex length increased with increasing duration of FR up to 1 1/4 to 2 hours but further increasing the duration of FR did not promote flowering more.The results implicate phytochrome in the promotion of flowering by FR light. It has been demonstrated that a low [Pfr]/[P] ratio (less than present in 25% R/75% FR) is needed over a relatively long period of time: this explains why a relatively high proportion of FR light must be added to R for several hours in order to give maximum promotion of flowering. It is concluded that, in Lolium, the increased flowering response to FR light is brought about by a reduction of [Pfr]/[P] ratio at the appropriate time, although the possibility that another effect of far-red is also involved has not been rigorously excluded.  相似文献   

8.
Summary To follow changes in the status of phytochrome in green tissue and to relate these changes to the photoperiodic control of flowering, we have used a null response technique involving 1.5-min irradiations with mixtures of different ratios of R and FR radiation.Following a main photoperiod of light from fluorescent lamps that was terminated with 5 min of R light, the proportion of Pfr in Chenopodium rubrum cotyledons was high and did not change until the 3rd hour in darkness; at this time, Pfr disappeared rapidly. When the dark period began with a 5-min irradiation with BCJ or FR light to set the proportion of Pfr low Pfr gradually reappeared during the first 3 h of darkness and then disappeared again.The timing of disappearance of Pfr is consistent with the involvement of phytochrome in photoperiodic time measurement. Reappearance of Pfr after an initial FR irradiation explains why FR irradiations sometimes fail to influence photoperiodic time measurement or only slightly hasten time measurement. A R light interruption to convert Pr to Pfr delayed, the timer by 3 h but only for interruptions after and not before the time of Pfr disappearance. Such 5-min R-light interruptions did not influence the operation of the rhythmic timekeeping mechanism. Continuous or intermittent-5 min every 1.5 h-irradiations of up to 6 h in duration were required to rephase the rhythm controlling flowering. A skeleton photoperiod of 6 h that was began and terminated by 5 or 15 min of light failed to rephase the rhythm.The shape of the curves for the rhythmic response of C. rubrum to the length of the dark period are sometimes suggestive of clocks operating on the principle of a tension-relaxation mechanism. Such a model allows for separate timing action of a rhythm and of Pfr disappearance over the early hours of darkness. Separate timing action does not, however, preclude an interaction between the rhythm and phytochrome in controlling flowering.Abbreviations FR far-red - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pr red-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red - BCJ photographic ruby-red irradiation A grant in aid of research from the National Research Council of Canada to B. G. Cumming is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The rhythm in melatonin production in the rat is driven by a circadian rhythm in the pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity. Rats adapted to an artificial lighting regime of 12 h of light and 12 h of darkness per day were exposed to an 8-h advance of the light-dark regime accomplished by the shortening of one dark period; the effect of melatonin, triazolam and fluoxetine, together with 5-hydroxytryptophan, on the reentrainment of the NAT rhythm was studied.In control rats, the NAT rhythm was abolished during the first 3 cycles following the advance shift. It reappeared during the 4th cycle; however, the phase relationship between the evening rise in activity and the morning decline was still compressed.Melatonin accelerated the NAT rhythm reentrainment. In rats treated chronically with melatonin at the new dark onset, the rhythm had already reappeared during the 3rd cycle, in the middle of the advanced night, and during the 4th cycle, the phase relationship between the evening onset and the morning decline of the NAT activity was the same as before the advance shift. In rats treated chronically with melatonin at the old dark onset or in those treated with melatonin 8 h, 5 h and 2 h after the new dark onset during the 1st, 2nd and 3rd cycle, respectively, following the advance shift, the NAT rhythm reappeared during the 3rd cycle as well but in the last third of the advanced night only.Neither triazolam nor fluoxetine together with 5-hydroxytryptophan administered around the new dark onset facilitated NAT rhythm reentrainment after the 8-h advance of the light-dark cycle.Abbreviations NAT N-acetyltransferase - LD cycle light-dark cycle - CT circadian time - LD xy light dark cycle comprising x h of light and y h of darkness  相似文献   

10.
Halaban R 《Plant physiology》1969,44(7):973-977
Studies were made of the effects of blue, green, red and far-red (FR) light on the circadian rhythm of leaf movement of Coleus blumei × C. frederici, a short day plant. Under continuous illumination with blue light, there was a significant lengthening of the period of the rhythm to about 24.0 hr, as compared to 22.5 hr in continuous darkness. Under continuous red light, the period length was significantly shortened to 20.5 hr. Under continuous green or FR, the period length was not significantly different from the dark control. It was observed that under continuous FR illumination, the leaves tended to oscillate in a more downward position. Eight-hr red light signals were effective in advancing the phase of the rhythm as compared to a control under continuous green light. Blue light signals were effective in delaying the phase of the rhythm. FR light signals were ineffective in producing either delay or advance phase shifts. Far-red light did not reverse the effects of either red or blue light signals. On the basis of these results it is suggested, that pigments which absorb blue or red light, rather than phytochrome, mediate the effect of light on the circadian rhythm of leaf movement.  相似文献   

11.
The adult emergence rhythm of Telenomus busseolae, an egg parasitoid of Sesamia nonagrioides, was examined when parasitoids were exposed to different light-dark regimes. Most of the adult parasitoids emerged throughout the whole period of the photoperiodic cycle. Peak male emergence occurred 2–5 hours earlier than that of females. Adult emergence was asynchronous in continuous darkness or light. However, regimes of alternative light and dark phases such as L4:D20, L8:D16, L12:D12, L16:D8 and L20:D4 h generated a population rhythm with a period length of 24 hours. The peak of the emergence activity moves from the scotophase to the middle of the photophase with an increase of the photophase from 4 to 20 h. Rhythmical activity of adults was synchronised within 2 cycles when immature stages of parasitoid grow under continuous light conditions (LL) and then transferred to L12:D12. Moreover, emergence rhythm persisted and continued in a free-run with a period length of less than 24 hours by transferring a rhythmic culture from L12:D12 h to LL or RR (continuous red light) conditions, indicating the existence of a circadian rhythm. The ecological implications of the expression rhythm relate to better survival of the parasitoids.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of photoperiodic regulation of regeneration in Begonia leaves has been studied by the night interruption technique in 24, 48, and 72-h cycles. The response to 30 min red light interruptions in 48 and 72-h cycles indicated a circadian rhythm in red light sensitivity with typical photophile and scotophile phases. In 24-h cycles two types of response patterns were observed. With a main photoperiod of 3 h the usual response pattern with only one light-sensitive phase near the middle of the dark period was found, whereas with 8-h photoperiods two light-sensitive phases were observed as previously reported by Zimmer in Begonia flowering studies (Gartenbauwissenschaft 38: 57, 1973). Reversion studies with FR indicate that the reactions are mediated by phytochrome. The results are discussed in relation to alternative hypotheses for photoperiodic timing.  相似文献   

13.
We examined the effects of pinealectomy and blinding (bilateral ocular enucleation) on the circadian locomotor activity rhythm in the Japanese newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster. The pinealectomized newts were entrained to a light-dark cycle of 12 h light and 12 h darkness. After transfer to constant darkness they showed residual rhythmicity for at least several days which was gradually disrupted in prolonged constant darkness. Blinded newts were also entrained to a 12 h light/12 h dark cycle. In subsequent constant darkness they showed free-running rhythms of locomotor activity. However, the freerunning periods noticeably increased compared with those observed in the previous period of constant darkness before blinding. In blinded newts entrained to the light/dark cycle the activity rhythms were gradually disrupted after pinealectomy even in the presence of the light/dark cycle. These results suggest that both the pineal and the eyes are involved in the newt's circadian system, and also suggest that the pineal of the newt acts as an extraretinal photoreceptor which mediates the entrainment of the locomotor activity rhythm.Abbreviations circadian period - DD constant darkness - LD cycle, light-dark cycle - LD 12:12 light-dark cycle of 12 h light and 12 h darkness  相似文献   

14.
15.
The control by light of the flowering response rhythm in the short-day plant Pharbitis nil Choisy cv. Violet was examined by giving a single pulse of light at various times between 1 and 6 h after a 24-h light period. When the first circadian cycle of the rhythm was monitored, it was found that a pulse of red light given at 1, 2 or 3 h into a 72-dark period caused a 1-h delay of the phase of the response rhythm, while a pulse at 6 h caused a 2-h delay. These results support the hypothesis that, when red-light pulses are given at hourly intervals, they are as effective as continuous light in preventing the onset of dark timing because they repeatedly return the rhythm to the circadian time at which it is apparently suspended in continuous light. The perception of and response to continuous light and red-light pulses are also briefly discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Stem extension in light-grown plants of Chenopodium rubrum L. ecotype selection 184 (50°10'N; 150°35'W) was recorded continuously for periods up to one week at constant temperature. Stem extension rate measurements were made with linear voltage-displacement transducer devices. At the beginning of experiments, the 3rd intenode above the cotyledons was about 5 mm long. Stem extension rate exhibited a rhythmic behaviour in continuous white light (20 W m−2), and in continuous darkness with a period of approximately 23 h. In continuous darkness, the amplitude of the rhythm damped out very quickly after 24 h and a second peak was just measurable. The mean value of the stem extension rate was dependent on the light fluence before the experiments. This overt rhythm, which could be observed at the individual plant or even internode level, exhibited the characteristics of an endogenous circadian rhythm. There was no correlation of the peak time to local time. The peak time was determined by the time of transfer from dark to light for dark periods equal to or longer than 8 h, and the phase was shifted by the time of transfer from light to dark at the proper phase of a pre-existing rhythm.  相似文献   

17.
Lemna paucicostata 441 exposed to a single dark period of variouslengths showed a rhythmic flowering response with a 22- to 24-hperiod, even when the dark period was preceded by continuouslight. The critical night length (about 12 h) was scarcely influencedby pretreatment with 8D–4L (8 h of darkness followed by4 h of light), 8D–8L or 8D–12L. However, the rhythmof the response in the second cycle was markedly damped by thepretreatment with 8D–4L or 8D–12L, and was slightlyamplified by 8D–8L. The flowering response to a red-light interruption given atdifferent times in the inductive dark period also showed circadianrhythmicity even when the dark period was preceded by continuouslight, and this rhythmicity was scarcely influenced by a dark-lighttreatment given prior to the inductive dark period. A red-lightinterruption given at the 6th or 14th hour of the dark periodmarkedly shifted the phase of the rhythm of the response tothe length of the following dark period (the former delayedand the latter advanced), but that given at the same phase markedlyweakened and disturbed the rhythmicity of the response to ared-light interruption given in the following dark period. (Received March 21, 1992; Accepted June 12, 1992)  相似文献   

18.
A circadian rhythm in growth was detected by computer-aided image analysis in 3–4-cm-long, juvenile sporophytes of the kelp species Pterygophora California Rupr. and in seven Laminaria spp. In P. californica, the free-running rhythm occurred in continuous white fluorescent light, had a period of 26 h at 10°or 15°C, and persisted for at least 2 weeks in white or blue light. The rhythm became insignificant in continuous green or red light after 3 cycles. Synchronization by white light-dark regimes, e.g. by 16 h light per day, resulted in an entrained period of 24 h and in a shift of the circadian growth minimum into the middle of the light phase. A morning growth peak represented the decreasing portion of the circadian growth curve, and an evening peak the increasing portion. The circadian growth peak was not visible during the dark phase, because growth rate decreased immediately after the onset of darkness. At night, some growth still occurred at 16 or 12 h light per day, whereas growth stopped completely at 8 h light per day, as in continuous darkness. During 11 days of darkness, the thallus area became reduced by 3.5%, but growth rate recovered in subsequent light–dark cycles, and the circadian growth rhythm reappeared in subsequent continuous light.  相似文献   

19.
The control of night-break timing was studied in dark-grown seedlings of Pharbitis nil (Choisy cv. Violet) following a single continuous or skeleton photoperiod. There was a rhythmic response to a red (R) interruption of an inductive dark period, and the phasing of the rhythm was influenced by the preceding light treatment.

Following a continuous white light photoperiod of 6 hours or less, the points of maximum inhibition of flowering were constant in real time. Following a continuous photoperiod of more than 6 hours, maximum inhibition occurred at 9 and 32.5 hours after the end of the light period. The amplitude of the rhythm during the second circadian cycle was much reduced following prolonged photoperiods.

Following a skeleton photoperiod, the time of maximum sensitivity to a R interruption was always related to the second pulse of the skeleton, R2, with the first point of maximum inhibition of flowering occurring after 12 to 18 hours and the second after 39 hours. Without a second R pulse, the time of maximum sensitivity to a R interruption was related to the initial R1 pulse. A `light-off' or dusk signal was not mimicked by a R pulse ending a skeleton photoperiod; such a pulse only generated a `light-on' signal and initiated a new rhythm.

It is concluded that the timing of sensitivity to a R interruption of an inductive dark period in Pharbitis nil is controlled by a single circadian rhythm initiated by a light-on signal. After 6 hours in continuous white light, the phase of this rhythm is determined by the transition to darkness. Following an extended photoperiod, the timing characteristics were those of an hourglass; this seemed to be due to an effect on the coupling or expression of a single circadian timer during the second and subsequent cycles, rather than to the operation of a different timing mechanism.

In addition to the effects on timing, the photoperiod affected the magnitude of the flowering response.

  相似文献   

20.
Background: Persuasive evidence for circadian programs in non-photosynthetic bacteria other than cyanobacteria is still lacking, we aimed to investigate the circadian rhythm of specific growth rate in Escherichia coli ATCC 25922, one of the important prokaryotes. Methods: To grow E. coli under different light and dark conditions. When the growth entered into the stationary phase, we stopped the culture and obtained the viable counts by MTT assay every 3 h. The specific growth rates (SGRs) were calculated and analyzed with cosinor method for potential rhythms. Results: Single cosinor method revealed that the SGR of E. coli displayed rhythmic variations with a period of around 24 h both under light/dark cycles and under constant darkness. The best-fitting periods and best-fitting cosine curves were acquired. Conclusions: The SGR of E. coli (ATCC 25922) in a culture medium with limiting substrates in the stationary and death phases displayed rhythmic variations with a period of around 24 h under light/dark cycles and constant darkness conditions.  相似文献   

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