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1.
Iino  Moritoshi  Briggs  Winslow R.  Schäfer  Eberhard 《Planta》1984,160(1):41-51
Unilateral irradiation with red light (R) or blue light (BL) elicits positive curvature of the mesocotyl of maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings raised under R for 2 d from sowing and kept in the dark for 1 d prior to curvature induction. The fluenceresponse curve for R-induced mesocotyl curvature, obtained by measuring curvature 100 min after phototropic induction, shows peaks in two fluence ranges, designated first positive range (from the threshold to the trough), and second positive range (above the trough). The fluence-response curve for BL is similar to that for R but shifted two orders of magnitude to higher fluences. Blue light elicits the classical first positive curvature of the coleoptile, whereas this response is not found with R. Positive mesocotyl curvature induced by either R or BL is eliminated by R given from above just before the unilateral irradiation, whereas BL-induced coleoptile curvature is not eliminated. The above results collectively offer evidence that phototropic curvature of the mesocotyl is induced by R-sensitive photosystem(s). Mesocotyl curvature in the second positive range is reduced by vertical far-red light (FR) applied after phototropic induction with R, but is not affected by FR applied before R. Unilateral irradiation with FR following vertical irradiation with a high R fluence leads to negative curvature of the mesocotyl. It is concluded that mesocotyl curvature in the second positive range results from a gradient in the amount of the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) established across the plant axis. Mesocotyl curvature in the first positive range is inhibited by vertical FR given either before or after phototropic induction with R. Since the FR used here is likely to produce more Pfr than the very low fluences of R eliciting the mesocotyl curvature in the first positive range, it is assumed that FR reduces the response in this case by adding Pfr at both sides of the plant axis. By rotating seedlings on a clinostat with its axis horizontal, the kinetics of mesocotyl curvature can be studied in the absence of a counteracting gravitropic response. On the clinostat, the R-induced mesocotyl curvature develops after a lag, through two successive phases having different curvature rates, the late phase is slower than the early phase. Negative curvature of the coleoptile can be induced by either R or BL; the BL-induced negative curvature is found at fluences higher than those giving positive curvature. The clinostat experiments show that the negative coleoptile curvature induced by either R or BL is a gravitropic compensation for positive mesocotyl curvature.Abbreviations BL blue light - FR far-red light - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red-absorbing form - Pr phytochrome in the red-absorbing form - R red light C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 824  相似文献   

2.
The effects of preirradiation with blue light on the shift of the fluence-response curve for the first and the second positive curvatures were examined in Pilobolus crystallinus (Wiggers) Tode sporangiophores. A 1-min preirradiation with blue light at 47 or 960 nmol·m-2 lowered the fluence-response curve for the first positive curvature and shifted the peak to a higher fluence. The fluence-response curve was shifted back to a lower fluence when a dark period was inserted between the preirradiation and the curvature-inducing light. This shift back to lower fluence was biphasic when the fluence was high (960 nmol · m-2), indicating the participation of two components in the phototropic reaction for the first positive curvature.The fluence-response curve for the second positive curvature did not seem to be shifted to a higher fluence region when fluence was varied by varying exposure time. However, the fluence-response curve obtained by varying the fluence rate of a 20-min irradiation period indicated that the second positive curvature was also shifted to a higher-fluence region by preirradiation with blue light. A small shoulder appeared on the fluence-response curve when preirradiation at a high fluence rate was given.Abbreviations BL blue light - CIL curvature-inducing light  相似文献   

3.
Nick P  Schafer E 《Planta》1988,173(2):213-220
The influence of gravitropic stimulation upon blue-light-induced first positive phototropism for stimulations in the same (light source and center of gravity opposite to each other) and in opposing directions was investigated in maize cole-optiles by measuring fluence-response patterns. As a result of gravitropic counterstimulation, phototropic bending was transient with maximum curvature occurring 100 min after stimulation. On a horizontal clinostat, however, the seedlings curved for 20 h. Gravistimulation in the opposite direction acted additively upon blue-light curvature. Gravistimulation in the same direction as phototropic stimulation produced a complex behaviour deviating from simple additivity. This pattern can be explained by a gravitropically mediated sensitization of the phototropic reaction, an optimal dependence of differential growth on the sum of photo-and gravistimulation, and blue-light-induced inhibition of gravitropic curvature at high fluences. These findings indicate that several steps of photo-and gravitransduction are separate. Preirradiation with red light desensitized the system independently of applied gravity-treatment, indicating that the site of red-light interaction is common to both transduction chains.Abbreviations BL blue light - G+ stimulation by light and gravity in the same direction (i.e. light source and center of gravity opposite to each other) - G- stimulation by light and gravity in opposing directions  相似文献   

4.
M. Iino 《Planta》1987,171(1):110-126
Blue-light-induced phototropism of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles was studied with a view to kinetic models. Red-light-grown plants were used to eliminate complication arising from the activation by blue light of phytochrome-mediated phototropism. In the first part, mathematical models were developed to explain the phototropic fluence-response data, which were obtained for the responses induced by a single unilateral pulse (30 s) and those induced by a unilateral pulse (30 s) given immediately after a bilateral pulse (30 s, fixed fluences). These data showed bell-shaped fluence-response curves, characteristic of first positive curvature. Modelling began with the assumptions that the light gradient plays a fundamental role in phototropism and that the magnitude of the response is determined by the gradient, or the concentration difference, in a photoproduct between the irradiated and the shaded sides of the tissue. Minimal mathematical models were then derived, by defining chemical kinetics of the photoreaction and introducing the minimum of parameters needed to correlate the incident fluencerate to the functional fluence-rates within the tissue, the functional fluence-rate to the rate constant of the photoreaction, and the photoproduct concentration difference to the curvature response. The models were tested using a curve-fitting computer program. The model obtained by assigning first-order kinetics to the photoreaction failed to explain the fluence-response data, whereas application of second-order kinetics led to a successful fit of the model to the data. In the second part, temporal aspects of the photosystem were examined. Experimental results showed that a high-fluence bilateral pulse eliminated the bell-shaped fluence-response curve for an immediate unilateral pulse, and that the curve gradually reappeared as the time for unilateral stimulation elapsed after the bilateral pulse. The model based on a second-order photoreaction could be extended to explain the results, with assumed changes in two components: the concentration of the reactant for the photoproduct, and the light-sensitivity of the reaction. The reactant concentration, computed with the curvefitting program, showed a gradual increase from zero to a saturation level. This increase was then modelled in terms of regeneration of the reactant from the photoproduct, with an estimated first-order rate constant of about 0.001·s-1. The computed value for the constant reflecting the light-sensitivity showed a sharp decline after the high-fluence pulse, followed by a gradual return to the initial level. From these analytical results, the appearance of second positive curvature was predicted.Abbreviations FPC first positive curvature - SPC second positive curvature CIW-DPB publication No. 884  相似文献   

5.
Neumann R  Iino M 《Planta》1997,201(3):288-292
Phototropism of rice (Oryza sativa L.) coleoptiles induced by unilateral blue light was characterized using red-light-grown seedlings. Phototropic fluence-response relationships, investigated mainly with submerged coleoptiles, revealed three response types previously identified in oat and maize coleoptiles: two pulse-induced positive phototropisms and a phototropism that depended on stimulation time. The effective ranges of fluences and fluence rates were comparable to those reported for maize. Compared with oats and maize, however, curvature responses in rice were much smaller and coleoptiles straightened faster after establishing the maximal curvature. When stimulated continuously, submerged coleoptiles developed curvature slowly over a period of 6 h, whereas air-grown coleoptiles, which showed smaller phototropic responsiveness, established a photogravitropic equilibrium from about 4 h of stimulation. The plot of the equilibrium angle against log fluence rates yielded a bell-shaped optimum curve that spanned over a relatively wide fluence-rate range; a maximal curvature of 25° occurred at a fluence rate of 1 μmol · m−2 · s−1. This optimum curve apparently reflects the light sensitivity of the steady-state phototropic response. Received: 28 June 1996 / Accepted: 30 July 1996  相似文献   

6.
Dark-adapted coleoptiles of maize (Zea mays L.) were treated with red light (3min at 10.5 μmol m?2S?1) and were Stimulated, after a dark interval, with a pulse of unilateral blue light to induce phototropism. Phototropic fluence-response curves were obtained in this way for different dark intervals. It was confirmed that the bell-shaped fluence-response curve for the first pulse-induced positive phototropism (FPIPP) shifts to higher fluences following the red-light treatment, the maximal shift being achieved at a dark interval of 2h. We found, however, that the two arms of the Fluence-response curve do not shift synchronously. The shift of the descending arm to higher fluences began at 15 min. The ascending arm showed a slight shift to lower fluences before a greater shift to higher flucnces. the change of the shift direction occurring at 30–40min. Accordingly, the fluence-response curve obtained for a 30 min dark interval was comparatively wide. Although dark-adapted coleoptiles showed only fPIPP, another bell-shaped fluence-response curve, representing the second pulse-induced positive phototropism (sPIPP), appeared gradually after the red-light treatment. These changes of the phototropic fluence– respnse curve following exposure to red light are likely to have adaptive values because they favour phototropism under brighter light.  相似文献   

7.
The fluence-response curve for first positive phototropic curvtureof dark-grown maize coleoptiles is shifted to ten-fold higherfluences if the coieoptiles are irradiated with red light 2h prior to the phototropic induction with blue light. Fluence-responsecurves for this red-induced shift were obtained with unilateralred irradiations 2 h prior to inductive blue pulses of differentfluences. They differ significantly depending on whether thered light was given from the same side as or the opposite sideto the respective inductive blue pulse, thus demonstrating thatthe red light effect is a local response of the coleoptile.The fluence-response curves for an inductive blue pulse in theascending part were compared with those for an inductive bluepulse in the descending part of the fluence-response curve forblue light induced phototropism. They are quite different inthreshold of red light sensitivity and shape for irradiationsfrom both the same and the opposite sides. This offers evidencefor the hypothesis that at least two different photosystemsare involved in phototropism, and that they are modulated differentlyby a red light preirradiation. All these fluence-response curvesindicate that it is possible to increase the response in thecoleoptile, if the red light preirradiation is given oppositeto the inductive blue pulse. This is supported by blue lightfluence-response curves obtained after a weak unilateral redpreirradiation. (Received September 11, 1986; Accepted October 18, 1986)  相似文献   

8.
Phototropism of Avena sativa L. has been characterized using a clinostat to negate the gravitropic response. The kinetics for development of curvature was measured following induction by a single pulse of blue light (BL), five pulses of BL at 20-min intervals, and this same pulsed-light regime following a 2-h red light (RL) pre-irradiation. A final curvature of about 14° is expressed within 180 min following the single pulse; a final curvature of about 62° in about 240 min following five pulses without pre-irradiation; and a curvature of over 125° in 360 min following five pulses after the RL pre-irradiation. For seedlings not pre-irradiated, the final curvature to five pulses of BL at a total fluence of 9.4 pmol·cm-2 increases with time of darkness between pulses up to 15 min; with seedlings pre-irradiated with RL, curvature increased more slowly with time of darkness between pulses to a maximum at 35 min. The final curvature induced by a constant fluence of 9.4 pmol·cm-2 increases linearly with time between the first pulse and last pulse of a five-pulse sequence. The curvature induced by a single BL pulse with a 5-min RL co-irradiation increases with fluence to a maximum of about 60° at about 10 pmol·cm-2, and then decreases to 0° at about 200 pmol·cm-2. Curvature induced by five BL pulses following a 2-h RL pre-irradiation increased with fluence from a threshold of about 0.05 pmol·cm-2 to a maximum of 90° at about 10 pmol·cm-2, and then gradually decreased with fluence to 50° at 1 000 pmol·cm-2. Based on these data, it is concluded that the initial photoproduct formed by a BL pulse has a limited lifetime, that there is a kinetic limitation downstream of the photoreceptor pigment for phototropism, and that the additivive effect of pulsed BL is distinct from the potentiating effect of RL on phototropism. Thus, any degree of curvature from 0° to over 90° may be induced by a fluence in the ascending arm of what is traditionally called the first positive phototropic response.Abbreviations BL blue light - RL red light  相似文献   

9.
A K Janoudi  K L Poff 《Plant physiology》1993,101(4):1175-1180
Phototropism is induced by blue light, which also induces desensitization, a partial or total loss of phototropic responsiveness. The fluence and fluence-rate dependence of desensitization and recovery from desensitization have been measured for etiolated and red light (669-nm) preirradiated Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings. The extent of desensitization increased as the fluence of the desensitizing 450-nm light was increased from 0.3 to 60 micromoles m-2 s-1. At equal fluences, blue light caused more desensitization when given at a fluence rate of 1.0 micromole m-2 s-1 than at 0.3 micromole m-2 s-1. In addition, seedlings irradiated with blue light at the higher fluence rate required a longer recovery time than seedlings irradiated at the lower fluence rate. A red light preirradiation, probably mediated via phytochrome, decreased the time required for recovery from desensitization. The minimum time for detectable recovery was about 65 s, and the maximum time observed was about 10 min. It is proposed that the descending arm of the fluence-response relationship for first positive phototropism is a consequence of desensitization, and that the time threshold for second positive phototropism establishes a period during which recovery from desensitization occurs.  相似文献   

10.
Unilateral irradiation of maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings results in a fluence-rate gradient, and hence below saturation, a gradient of the far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr). The Pfr-gradients established by blue, red and far-red light were spectrophotometrically measured in the mesocotyl. Based on these Pfr-gradients and the fluence-response curves of phytochrome photoconversion the fluence-rate gradients were calculated. The fluence-rate gradient in the blue (460 nm) was steeper than that in the red (665 nm), which in turn was steeper than that in the far-red light (725 nm). The fluence-rate ratios front to rear were 1:0.06 (460 nm), 1:0.2 (665 nm), and 1:0.33 (725 nm). The assumption that phytochrome-mediated phototropism of maize mesocotyls is caused by local phytochrome-mediated growth inhibition was tested in the following manner. Firstly, the Pfr response curve for growth inhibition was calculated; these calculations were based on measurements of Pfr-gradients and data from red-light-induced phototropism. Secondly, the Pfr response curve for growth inhibition was used as a basis for calculating fluence-response curves for blue-and far-red-light-induced phototropism. Finally, these calculated results were compared with experimental data. It was concluded that the threshold for phytochrome-mediated phototropism of maize mesocotyls reflects the apparent photoconversion cross section of phytochrome whereas the maximal inducable curvature depends on the steepness of the light (Pfr) gradient across the mesocotyl.Abbreviations Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - Fr far-red light  相似文献   

11.
P. Kunzelmann  M. Iino  E. Schäfer 《Planta》1988,176(2):212-220
The lateral fluence-rate gradients in unilaterally irradiated maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles were calculated on the basis of the proportions of P fr (far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome) measured spectroscopically in transverse slices of the coleoptiles (top 1 cm). The results showed the occurrence of significant gradients that are wavelength-dependent. The gradient at 449 nm was steeper than those measured at 516, 534 and 551 nm, which were steeper than that measured at 665 nm. The ratios between the sides proximal and distal to the light source were, for example, 1:0.12 (449 nm), 1:0.23 (534 nm), and 1:0.28 (665 nm). Fluence-response curves for coleoptile phototropism (first positive curvature produced by less than 100 s unilateral irradiation) were measured at 449, 516, 534 and 551 nm. Comparison of the threshold fluences indicated that the responsiveness to 551 nm is about 104.8 less than that to 449 nm. Increasing wavelengths led to a decrease in maximal curvature, which correlated with the decrease of the fluence-rate ratios between the proximal and distal sides. Phototropic fluence-response curves were also measured using bilateral irradiation (449 nm). In one set of experiments, the fluence ratio was kept constant (either 1:1/2, 1:1/4 or 1:1/16) and the total fluence was varied, and in the other set the fluence applied to one side was kept constant and the fluence ratio was varied. A simple model based on the assumption that only one photoreaction occurs, and that the response is a function of the difference between the proximal and distal sides in the local photoreceptor action was tested. A fluence-response curve for this local photoreceptor action was calculated based on the fluence-rate ratio and the phototropic fluence-response curve measured for 449 nm. This curve was used, in conjunction with the measured fluence-rate ratios, as a basis for calculating phototropic fluence-response curves for other wavelengths and those for 449 nm obtained with bilateral irradiation. The calculated fluence-response curves showed excellent agreement with the experimental data. It is concluded that the threshold for maize coleoptile phototropism reflects the apparent photoconversion cross-section of the blue-light receptor whereas the maximal curvature depends on the steepness of the light gradient across the coleoptile.Abbreviations and symbols I(x) fluence rate at the depth x - P fr phytochrome (far-red absorbing) - P r phytochrome (red absorbing) - P tot total phytochrome (P r+P fr) - photoconversion cross-section  相似文献   

12.
Aerial parts of plants curve towards the light (i.e. positive phototropism), and roots typically grow away from the light (i.e. negative phototropism). In addition, Arabidopsis roots exhibit positive phototropism relative to red light (RL), and this response is mediated by phytochromes A and B (phyA and phyB). Upon light stimulation, phyA and phyB interact with the phytochrome kinase substrate (PKS1) in the cytoplasm. In this study, we investigated the role of PKS1, along with phyA and phyB, in the positive phototropic responses to RL in roots. Using a high-resolution feedback system, we studied the phenotypic responses of roots of phyA, phyB, pks1, phyA pks1 and phyB pks1 null mutants as well as the PKS1-overexpressing line in response to RL. PKS1 emerged as an intermediary in the signalling pathways and appears to promote a negative curvature to RL in roots. In addition, phyA and phyB were both essential for a positive response to RL and act in a complementary fashion. However, either photoreceptor acting without the other results in negative curvature in response to red illumination so that the mode of action differs depending on whether phyA and phyB act independently or together. Our results suggest that PKS1 is part of a signalling pathway independent of phyA and phyB and that PKS1 modulates RL-based root phototropism.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract The phototropic response in stems of higher plants is brought about by blue/UV light. The problem studied here is to what extent long-wavelength light, which is absorbed by phytochrome, affects the phototropic response. A refined measurement of phototropism — a curvature index — was applied to the hypocotyl of the sesame seedling (Sesamum indicum L.). The time course of the phototropic response was followed in continuous unilateral weak blue light (B, 460 nm, 8 mW m?2). Long term red light (R) pretreatments, operating through phytochrome, strongly increase the rate and extent of the phototropic response once it is elicited by unilateral B, while the pretreatments decrease the sensitivity towards B. If a R pulse is given immediately prior to the onset of unilateral B, the rate of the response is strongly reduced compared to the time course of curvature observed when the pretreatment was terminated with a long wavelength far-red light (FR) pulse. R and FR were then applied simultaneously with unilateral B to manipulate the status of the phytochrome system during actual curvature. It was found that a low Pfr/P ratio (established by FR) stimulates the phototropic response far above the control (B alone), while a high Pfr/P ratio (established by R) reduces the response below the control. During bending a positive effect of phytochrome on the rate and extent of the phototropic response, which is saturated at a low level of Pfr, appears to be counteracted by an inhibitory effect which dominates at higher levels of Pfr, such as established by omnilateral R. However, if R is applied unilaterally from the same direction as B, R increases the rate of curvature. Apparently the sesame seedling is capable of detecting the direction of R relative to the direction of B. While a mechanistic explanation of these effects cannot be advanced at present, it is clear that the seedling is capable of super-imposing information about the actual light conditions during bending on a ‘memory’ of the light conditions prior to the onset of bending. Thus, the previous as well as the actual light conditions determine its phototropic responsiveness.  相似文献   

14.
Pulse-induced phototropisms in oat and maize coleoptiles   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Iino M 《Plant physiology》1988,88(3):823-828
Phototropisms induced by a pulse (1-30 seconds) of blue light in red-light-grown coleoptiles of oats (Avena sativa L.) and maize (Zea mays L.) were investigated in terms of fluence-response relationships and time courses. Phototropic stimulation was made by a laser beam (457.9 nanometers), allowing application of high-fluence pulses. The phototropic fluence-response curves for oats and maize revealed two peaks in the positive range, thus indicating the occurrence of two separable pulse-induced positive responses. The response at low fluences corresponded to the `first positive curvature.' The response at high fluences was very small in oats, but was large in maize. Reciprocity was valid in this high-fluence response (tested only for maize), indicating that it is distinct from the so-called `second positive curvature.' In oats, the trough between the two positive responses fell into the negative range. This negative response, corresponding to the `first negative curvature,' showed time courses distinct from those of `first positive curvature:' the negative response was induced after a longer time lag and developed with a more gradual increase of the rate of bending. The maximal rate of the negative response was as high as one-half of that of first positive curvature. In maize, the trough between the two responses was in the positive range, and the time-course result revealed no apparent response counteracting the positive responses. Physiological and ecological implications of the pulse-induced phototropisms are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Evidence for a phytochrome-mediated phototropism in etiolated pea seedlings   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3  
Entirely etiolated pea seedlings (Pisum sativum, L. cv Alaska) were tested for a phototropic response to short pulses of unilateral blue light. They responded with small curvatures resembling in fluence-dependence and kinetics of development a phytochrome-mediated phototropic response previously described in maize mesocotyls. Irradiations from above with saturating red or far-red light, either immediately before or after the unilateral phototropic stimulus, strongly reduced or eliminated subsequent positive phototropic curvature. Only blue light from above, however, entirely eliminated curvature at all fluences of stimulus. It is concluded that the phototropism is primarily a result of phytochrome action.  相似文献   

16.
Phototropism: mechanisms and ecological implications   总被引:14,自引:5,他引:9  
Abstract. Phototropism in seed plants, either etiolated or de-etiolated, is mediated by unidentified photoreceptor(s) sensitive to blue and near-UV regions of the light spectrum. Green plants may have an additional phototropic system sensitive to red light. Fluence-response studies of the blue light-sensitive phototropism, initially made on oat coleoptiles, have indicated the occurrence of multiple response types. Of those, two are found to be general: the first pulse-induced positive phototropism (fPIPP), or the so-called first positive curvature, and the time-dependent phototropism (TDP) or the second positive curvature. The fPIPP, elicited by a pulse stimulus shorter than a few minutes, is characterized by a bell-shaped fluence-response curve and the validity of reciprocity. The TDP, elicited by prolonged irradiation, is characterized by its dependence on the exposure time and the invalidity of reciprocity. Studies made on these two response types have revealed the following: (1) plants acquire directional light information for phototropism by sensing internal light gradients created by light scattering and absorption; (2) phototropism results from redistribution of growth, i.e. inhibition on the irradiated side and compensating stimulation on the shaded side; (3) lateral movement of growth regulators, the principle of the Cholodny-Went theory, can account for the growth redistribution, and auxin is clearly the mediating regulator in maize coleoptiles. This review further describes some mechanistic implications of fPIPP. Experimental results indicate that (1) fPIPP is mediated by a single step of photoreaction, (2) the responsiveness, reflected in the height of the fluenceresponse curve, is reduced by pre-irradiation with blue light and recovers gradually afterward, and (3) the light sensitivity, reflected in the position of the fluence-response curve along the log fluence axis, is also reduced by the pre-irradiation and recovers gradually. Analyses of these results, based on kinetic models, suggest that the bell-shaped fluence-response curve is caused by the difference in the amounts of a photoproduct between irradiated and shaded sides, and that fPIPP represents a mechanism of TDP. It is also indicated that phytochrome in the red-absorbing form exerts two separate effects on phototropism: reduction of the light sensitivity and enhancement of the responsiveness. Along with the discussion of the mechanisms of phototropism, their ecological implications are considered.  相似文献   

17.
先前的研究考察了红光对玉米(Zea mays L.cv.Royaldent Hit85)胚芽鞘向光性反应的影响,本研究进一步分析了红光对蓝光照射时间依赖型向光性(TDP)影响的光具-反应曲线,发现该反应不像红光对脉冲蓝光诱导的向光性的影响那样属于超低光量反应,而是一种低光量反应,且之后的脉冲远红光可以逆转红光对TDP影响的效果。但远红光预处理延长后,逆转了的TDP反应性可以得到恢复。不仅如此,暗适应胚芽鞘接受不同时间的单独远红光预处理后可同样获得与预处理光量成比例的TDP反应性,表明暗适应胚芽鞘在接受远红光顶处理后亦可建立起长时间向光性蓝光照射的反应能力。远红光对TDP反应性影响的光量-反应曲线分析揭示,该远红光影响依赖于照射时间并要求高光量。鉴于高光量范围内上述远红影响不符合所谓反比定律,远红光对TDP反应性的影响很可能属一高辐照反应,根据上述研究发现探讨了植物光敏素作用模式与不同光性反应信号转导途径之间可能存在的相互关系。  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies have examined the effects of red light (R) on phototropism of maize ( Zea mays L. cv. Royaldent Hit 85) coleoptiles. The R effect on time-dependent phototropism (TDP) was further studied by characterizing its fluence-response relationship. The results showed the R effect was a low-fluence-response, unlike those on pulse-induced phototropisms that show a very-low-fluence-response mode. A subsequent pulse of far-red light (FR) could reverse the R effect. TDP responsiveness, however, recovered as the following FR was extended. The FR-dependent increase in TDP responsiveness was obtained even coleoptiles were pretreated only with FR. It suggested that TDP responsiveness could also be established in response to a FR signal. The fluence-response relationship for the effect of FR was then investigated. The effect of FR depended on the time of irradiation and required high photon fluences. Because reciprocity was invalid at the higher fluence range, the effect of FR would be a high-irradiance-response mode. Relation between phytochrome action modes and possible multiple pathways for phototropic signal transduction was analyzed based on the experiment results.  相似文献   

19.
The possible correlation between blue light-dependent phosphorylation of a 116-kD protein and phototropic responses of etiolated oat (Avena sativa L.) seedlings was tested by a micromethod for protein phosphorylation. Quantitation of the basipetal distribution of this protein showed that the in vitro 32p phosphorylation values declined exponentially from tip to node, with more than 50% of the total label being found in the uppermost 5 mm. Nonsaturating preirradiation of the coleoptiles in vivo resulted in partial phosphorylation with endogenous ATP. Subsequent in vitro phosphorylation under saturating irradiation allowed the determination of the degree of in vivo phosphorylation. Unilateral preirradiation resulted in higher in vivo phosphorylation on the irradiated than on the shaded side of the coleoptile. The fluence-response curve for the difference in phosphorylation between both sides of the coleoptile resembles the fluence-response curve for first-positive phototropic curvature, although it is shifted by two orders of magnitude to higher fluences. Possible reasons for this shift are discussed. In the coleoptile base the phosphorylation gradient across the coleoptile becomes larger with increasing time of irradiation at a constant fluence. Thus, phosphorylation of the 116-kD protein, in accordance with second-positive phototropic curvature, does not obey the Bunsen-Roscoe reciprocity law.  相似文献   

20.
In general, phototropic responses in land plants are induced by blue light and mediated by blue light receptor phototropins. In many cryptogam plants including the fern Adiantum capillus-veneris, however, red as well as blue light effectively induces a positive phototropic response in protonemal cells. In A. capillus-veneris, the red light effect on the tropistic response is mediated by phytochrome 3 (phy3), a chimeric photoreceptor of phytochrome and full-length phototropin. Here, we report red and blue light-induced negative phototropism in A. capillus-veneris rhizoid cells. Mutants deficient for phy3 lacked red light-induced negative phototropism, indicating that under red light, phy3 mediates negative phototropism in rhizoid cells, contrasting with its role in regulating positive phototropism in protonemal cells. Mutants for phy3 were also partially deficient in rhizoid blue light-induced negative phototropism, suggesting that phy3, in conjunction with phototropins, redundantly mediates the blue light response.  相似文献   

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