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1.
Of the three morphological subunits of Avena sativa stem segments (node, leaf-sheath and internode) examined, internodes constituted the richest source of phospholipids and sterols, yielding almost double the concentration of lipid found in the leaf-sheath. The phospholipid compositions of nodes and internodes were similar, comprising mostly phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), with linoleic, linolenic and palmitic acids as the predominant component fatty acids. Leaf-sheath tissue contained mainly PE, with equally high amounts of palmitic, linoleic and linolenic acids. β-Sitosterol and cholesterol were the major 4-desmethylsterols of the internode, while β-sitosterol was predominant in the node and leaf-sheath tissues. The growth temperature of segments prior to isolation produced its major effect on the concentration of stigmasterol, which decreased markedly with temperature. The sitosterol/stigmasterol ratio increased significantly as temperature decreased. Stem segments isolated from plants treated with gibberellic acid (GA3) for 3 weeks, showed a significant reduction in the amounts of 4-desmethyl sterols on a dry wt basis when compared with control segments. However, when stem segments were incubated with GA3 for 20 hr, no change in 4-desmethylsterol composition or concentration was observed, even though significant growth in response to GA3 occurred.  相似文献   

2.
Acanthostachys strobilacea Link, Klotzsch, & Otto is an ornamental bromeliad native to Brazilian Atlantic Forest that naturally exhibits a rosette growth pattern. According to the temperature conditions of the in vitro culture, this species can exhibit stem elongation, facilitating the isolation of the nodal segments to be applied in its micropropagation. The rosette morphology is reestablished when this species is maintained under low temperature, thus allowing the maintenance of a germplasm collection (slow growth storage). Gibberellins (GA) are usually applied to stimulate stem elongation in micropropagated plants. Thus, our aim here was to verify the influence of temperature over the stem elongation of A. strobilacea when GA3 is applied to the medium, thus estimating the use of this phytoregulator in slow growth cultures at low temperatures. Physiological and anatomical studies were performed on plants obtained from nodal segments maintained at 10, 15, 20, and 25 °C. Regardless of the applied treatment, no segments developed at 10 °C. Stem elongation occurred at 25 and 30 °C, and was not seen for plants grown under 15 and 20 °C. The application of 50 µM of GA3 restored stem elongation in plants at 20 but not at 15 °C. The influence of gibberellins on stem elongation of this tropical bromeliad depends on the cultivation temperature, in which low temperature preponderates over the stem elongation effects of GA3. In addition, the optimum temperature for the slow growth of this species depends on the starting temperature of the explant used in the micropropagation.  相似文献   

3.
The lipid composition of Avena sativa stem segments was manipulated using BASF 13-338 (formerly Sandoz 9785) and growth temperature, in order to establish whether there were correlations between responsiveness of the tissue to gibberellic acid (GA3) and the presence, before hormone treatment, of specific lipid components. High correlations were obtained between GA3-induced growth and total phospholipid, individual phospholipids, and fatty acids (except for linolenic acid), total saturated fatty acids, stigmasterol content, and the unsaturated/saturated fatty acid ratio. It was concluded that, although the lipid composition, and particularly the total saturated fatty acid content, seem to be important contributory determinants of the GA3-induced growth response in this system, they may not be obligatory prerequisites, nor the only endogenous factors capable of influencing the response. However, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that membranes are involved in the hormonal mechanism and/or very early stages of the mode of GA3 action in this tissue.  相似文献   

4.
A micro-growth measuring technique was used to determine the growth response of stem segments of Avena sativa cv. Avon to a variety of gibberellic acid (GA3) concentrations over a range of incubation temperatures. Growth rate varied with GA3 concentration, the temperature at which the rate was measured, and the growth temperature of the plants prior to excision of the segments. The curves relating segment extension rates to temperature were affected by GA3 such that the linear portion of the curve was shifted to higher rates as GA3 concentration was increased. The results seem to be analogous to the GA3-induced shifts of thermally induced phase transitions in glucose leakage from liposomes, observed earlier (Wood, Paleg 1974 Aust J Plant Physiol 1: 31-40).  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Orchard-grown dwarf apple (Malus domestica Borkh.) trees selected from a hybrid population were propagated by tissue culture but had a growth pattern similar to standard cv. Golden Delicious plants when grown at constant 27°C instead of the expected dwarf pattern of growth. Shoot elongation was markedly reduced, with or without gibberellin A1 (GA1) or GA4 treatment, when trees were grown in an environment where day temperature was maintained at 35°C for 2 h in a ramped regime (night 20°C day ramped to 35°C, held for 2 h and ramped down to 20°C night over a 14-h photoperiod). Application of GA1 or GA4 partially overcame growth retardation resulting from prior paclobutrazol treatment of both standard and dwarf trees grown at constant 27°C and of standard trees grown in the ramped environment. However, these GAs had no effect on paclobutrazol-treated or untreated dwarfs grown in the ramped regime. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with labelled internal standards was used to quantify GA1, GA3, GA8, GA19, GA20 and GA29 in extracts from standard and dwarf plants grown either at a constant 27°C or in a 20-30-20°C ramped temperature regime. Standard plants, which elongate quite rapidly in either environment, had similar levels of these GAs in both temperature regimes. The slowly growing dwarfs in the ramped temperature environment contained three times more GA19 than the rapidly elongating dwarfs grown at 27°C. The concentrations of the other GAs were reduced to ca 40% or less in plants grown in the ramped temperature regime compared with those grown at 27°C. These data suggest that shoot elongation of dwarf plants is sensitive to elevated temperatures both as a result of reduced responsiveness to GAs and because of a reduction in the concentration of GA1, apparently as a result of a lower rate of conversion of GA19 to GA20. It is possible that the altered GA metabolism may be a consequence of the change in GA sensitivity.  相似文献   

7.
Auxin-Gibberellin Interactions in Pea: Integrating the Old with the New   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
Recent findings on auxin-gibberellin interactions in pea are reviewed, and related to those from studies conducted in the 1950s and 1960s. It is now clear that in elongating internodes, auxin maintains the level of the bioactive gibberellin, GA1, by promoting GA1 biosynthesis and by inhibiting GA1 deactivation. These effects are mediated by changes in expression of key GA biosynthesis and deactivation genes. In particular, auxin promotes the step GA20 to GA1, catalyzed by a GA 3-oxidase encoded by Mendel’s LE gene. We have used the traditional system of excised stem segments, in which auxin strongly promotes elongation, to investigate the importance for growth of auxin-induced GA1. After excision, the level of GA1 in wild-type (LE) stem segments rapidly drops, but the auxin indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) prevents this decrease. The growth response to IAA was greater in internode segments from LE plants than in segments from the le-1 mutant, in which the step GA20 to GA1 is impaired. These results indicate that, at least in excised segments, auxin partly promotes elongation by increasing the content of GA1. We also confirm that excised (light-grown) segments require exogenous auxin in order to respond to GA. On the other hand, decapitated internodes typically respond strongly to GA1 application, despite being auxin-deficient. Finally, unlike the maintenance of GA1 content by auxin, other known relationships among the growth-promoting hormones auxin, brassinosteroids, and GA do not appear to involve large changes in hormone level.  相似文献   

8.
Field pennycress (Thlaspi arvense L.) is a winter annual weed with a cold requirement for stem elongation and flowering. The relative abilities of several native gibberellins (GAs) and GA-precursors to elicit stem growth were compared. Of the eight compounds tested, gibberellin A1, (GA1), GA9, and GA20 caused stem growth in noninduced (no cold treatment) plants. No stem growth was observed in plants treated with ent-kaurene, ent-kaurenol, ent-kaurenoic acid, GA53, or GA8. Moreover, of the biologically active compounds, GA9 was the most active followed closely by GA1. In thermoinduced plants (4-week cold treatment at 6°C) that were continuously treated with 2-chlorocholine chloride to reduce endogenous GA production, GA9 was the most biologically active compound. However, the three kaurenoid GA precursors also promoted stem growth in thermoinduced plants, and were almost as active as GA20. No such increase in activity was observed for either GA[unk] or GA53. The results are discussed in relation to thermoinductive regulation of GA metabolism and its significance to the initiation of stem growth in field pennycress. It is proposed that thermoinduction results in increased conversion of ent-kaurenoic acid to GAs through the C-13 desoxy pathway and that GA9 is the endogenous mediator of thermoinduced stem growth in field pennycress.  相似文献   

9.
Talon M  Zeevaart JA 《Plant physiology》1990,92(4):1094-1100
Stem growth and flowering in the long-day plant Silene armeria L. are induced by exposure to a minimum of 3 to 6 long days (LD). Stem growth continues in subsequent short days (SD), albeit at a reduced rate. The growth retardant tetcyclacis inhibited stem elongation induced by LD, but had no effect on flowering. This indicates that photoperiodic control of stem growth in Silene is mediated by gibberellins (GA). The objective of this study was to analyze the effects of photoperiod on the levels and distribution of endogenous GAs in Silene and to determine the nature of the photoperiodic after-effect on stem growth in this plant. The GAs identified in extracts from Silene by full-scan combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), GA12, GA53, GA44, GA17, GA19, GA20, GA1, GA29, and GA8, are members of the early 13-hydroxylation pathway. All of these GAs were present in plants under SD as well as under LD conditions. The GA53 level was highest in plants in SD, and decreased in plants transferred to LD conditions. By contrast, GA19, GA20, and GA1 initially increased in plants transferred to LD, and then declined. Likewise, when Silene plants were returned from LD to SD, there was an increase in GA53, and a decrease in GA19, GA20, and GA1 which ultimately reached levels similar to those found in plants kept in SD. Thus, measurements of GA levels in whole shoots of Silene as well as in individual parts of the plant suggest that the photoperiod modulates GA metabolism mainly through the rate of conversion of GA53. As a result of LD induction, GA1 accumulates at its highest level in shoot tips which, in turn, results in stem elongation. In addition, LD also appear to increase the sensitivity of the tissue to GA, and this effect is presumably responsible for the photoperiodic after-effect on stem elongation in Silene.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Smith VA 《Plant physiology》1992,99(2):372-377
A comparative study of the metabolism of radiolabeled gibberellin (GA) 1, 19, and 20 in isolated vegetative tissues of isogenic Le and le pea (Pisum sativum) plants incubated in vitro with the appropriate GA substrate is described. The results of this study provide evidence that the enzymes involved in the latter stages of GA biosynthesis are spatially separated within the growing pea plant. Apical buds were not apparently involved in the production of bioactive GA1 or its immediate precursors. The primary site of synthesis of GA20 from GA19 was immature leaflets and tendrils, and the synthesis of bioactive GA1 and its inactive catabolite GA8 occurred predominantly in stem tissue. GA29, the inactive catabolite of GA20, was produced to varying extents in all the tissues examined. Little or no difference was observed in the ability of corresponding Le and le tissues to metabolize radiolabeled GA1, GA19, or even GA20. During a fixed period of 24 hours, stems of plants carrying the le mutation produced slightly more [3H]GA1 (and [3H]GA29) than those of Le plants. It has been concluded that the le mutation does not lie within the gene encoding the GA20 3β-hydroxylase protein.  相似文献   

12.
In this report, B9 treatment had no effect on the growing of rosette biennialScrophularia vernalis L.; it inhibited or slowed stem elongation. Applications of GA3 to B9 treated plants produced a significant increase of stem elongation, in relation to GA3 treated plants. Plants treated with only GA3 failed to flower; otherwise, the flowering of vernalized plants was not altered by GA3. Thus, B9 effect on flowering was tested by using GA3. B9 by itself induced flowering, it increased inflorescence formation in vernalized plants without altering stem growth pattern in the most of cases. The induction or the stimulation of flowering brought about by B9 was not reversed by GA3; we may thus hypothesize that flowering by B9 oannot be traced back to gibberellin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Gibberellic acid (GA3) induces invertase activity within 6 hours in Avena stem segments that are incubated in the dark at 23°. The maximum amount of promotion is about 5 times that of invertase activity in untreated segments. GA3 causes significant promotion of invertase activity at concentrations as low as 3 × 10−5 μm GA3. The increase in invertase activity elicited by GA3 between 3 × 10−5 μm and 300 μm closely parallels the growth promotion that is caused by GA3 over this concentration range. In control segments, invertase activity rises steeply during the first 6 hours of incubation, then decays slowly between 12 and 48 hours. In GA3-treated segments, the invertase activity also rises during the first 6 hours, parallel to that in control segments and continues to rise during the next 42 hours. These changes in invertase activity during 48-hour incubation periods do not parallel the changes in growth that occur in control and GA3-treated segments. Cycloheximide at 10 μg/ml abolishes all GA3-promoted growth and invertase activity in these segments. Actinomycin D at 40 and 80 μg/ml decreases GA3-promoted growth by 20% and invertase activity by 38 and 44%, respectively. The data clearly support the idea that protein synthesis is necessary for GA3-promoted growth and invertase activity in Avena stem segments.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Storage organ induction in vitro can limit the loss of plants during acclimatisation, and can substantially reduce the time to flower following acclimatisation. An initial experiment lasting 3 months showed that of the four Watsonia species investigated, only Watsonia vanderspuyiae was capable of consistent corm formation. Consequently, a second study investigating light, temperature (10, 15, 20 and 25°C), carbohydrates (sucrose at 3, 6, 9 or 12%) and plant growth regulators [α-naphthalene acetic acid (NAA), N 6-benzylaminopurine (BA), abscisic acid (ABA), gibberellic acid 3 (GA3), paclobutrazol (PAC) and methyl jasmonate (MeJa)], lasting 6 months, was performed. Abnormal corms were produced by W. lepida in response to ABA, but normal corms formed at lower temperatures (10 and 20°C). In contrast, corms were produced in most treatments of W. vanderspuyiae, with BA, PAC and ABA being the only treatments that inhibited corm induction. By examining the product of the proportion corm induction multiplied by corm mass, four treatments superior to the control (20°C, 1 mg l−1 GA3, 6% sucrose and continuous light) were selected for a factorial design experiment in W. vanderspuyiae. After 3 months, treatments were ranked according to their product. The best four combinations of these four factors all contained GA3 and were incubated at 20°C, suggesting synergistic interactions between gibberellins and reduced temperature.  相似文献   

17.
Gibberellin (GA) is believed to be involved in thermoperiodic stem elongation. With this in mind, we studied the correlation between gibberellin A1 (GA1) levels and stem elongation affected by alternating day (DT) and night temperature (NT) in 5 genotypes of Pisum sativum differing in their degree of dwarfism. The endogenous GA content in the tissue of two of the genotypes was determined by combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. The wild genotype developed 40 to 50% shorter stems and internodes under a low DT and high NT combination (negative difference [DIF] between DT and NT, DT/NT 15.5/21.5 or 14/24°C) than under the opposite regime of high DT and low NT (positive DIF, DT/NT 22.5/16.5 or 24/14°C). The GA biosynthetic mutants ls and le, and the auxin and brassinosteroid mutant lkb responded in a similar way, but not as strongly as the wild type. The stem length of the GA-insensitive slender mutant (la crys) was reduced by only 8% under negative compared to positive DIF. In the wild type endogenous GA levels decreased by 60% from positive to negative DIF in the upper part of the stem. Further, there was a corresponding decrease in the levels of precursors to GA1, i.e. GA53, GA44, GA19 and GA20, while 2β-hydroxylated GA20 and GA1, GA29 and GA8, respectively, were unaffected by DIF. A similar increase in the ratios of GA29 to GA20 and GA8 to GA1 from positive to negative DIF was seen in the stem tissue of the le mutant as in the wild type. The temperature regimes affected the levels of GA1 and its precursors in combined leaf and petiole samples and in the shoot tip in a similar manner as in the stem tissue. However, the different temperature regimes did not affect the ratio of GA8/GA1 in the shoot tip. The results indicate that altered stem elongation of the pea plants in response to diurnal temperature alternations may be mediated by changes in endogenous levels of GA1. The GA1 levels may be controlled by an effect of DIF on both biosynthetic and inactivation steps.  相似文献   

18.
Amaranthus retroflexus seeds were dormant at 25 °C in the darkness and in the light, and also at 35 °C in the darkness. GA3 and ethylene partially removed dormancy at 35 °C in the darkness and at 25 °C in the light. Dormancy was removed by 1–5 days of treatment with nitric oxide or cyanide. The effect of NO and HCN was inhibited by cPTIO, thus the effect of HCN was NO dependent. Dry storage for 16 weeks could partially release dormancy only at 35 °C, but not at 25 °C. Dry storage increased the response to light, GA3 and ethylene. The response to GA3 and ethylene at 25 °C was enhanced with increasing storage temperature. GA3, ethylene and nitric oxide could substitute dry storage and stratification in partially dormant seeds.  相似文献   

19.
A mutant gene that increases gibberellin production in brassica   总被引:10,自引:7,他引:3  
A single gene mutant (elongated internode [ein/ein]) with accelerated shoot elongation was identified from a rapid cycling line of Brassica rapa. Relative to normal plants, mutant plants had slightly accelerated floral development, greater stem dry weights, and particularly, increased internode and inflorescence elongation. The application of the triazole plant growth retardant, paclobutrazol, inhibited shoot elongation, returning ein to a more normal phenotype. Conversely, exogenous gibberellin A3 (GA3) can convert normal genotypes to a phenotype resembling ein. The content of endogenous GA1 and GA3 were estimated by gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring using [2H]GA1, as a quantitative internal standard and at day 14 were 1.5- and 12.1-fold higher per stem, respectively, in ein than in normal plants, although GA concentrations were more similar. The endogenous levels of GA20 and GA1, and the rate of GA19 metabolism were simultaneously analyzed at day 7 by feeding [2H2]GA19 and measuring metabolites [2H2]GA20 and [2H2]GA1 and endogenous GA20 and GA1, with [2H5]GA20 and [2H5]GA1 as quantitative internal standards. Levels of GA1 and GA20 were 4.6- and 12.9-fold higher, respectively, and conversions to GA20 and GA1 were 8.3 and 1.3 times faster in ein than normal plants. Confirming the enhanced rate of GA1 biosynthesis in ein, the conversion of [3H]GA20 to [3H]GA1 was also faster in ein than in the normal genotype. Thus, the ein allele results in accelerated GA1 biosynthesis and an elevated content of endogenous GAs, including the dihydroxylated GAs A1 and A3. The enhanced GA production probably underlies the accelerated shoot growth and development, and particularly, the increased shoot elongation.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of light on the dwarfing allele, le, in Pisum sativum L. was tested as the growth response to gibberellins prior to or beyond the presumed block in the gibberellin biosynthetic pathway. The response to the substrate (GA20), the product (GA1), and a nonendogenous early precursor (steviol) was compared in plants bearing the normal Le and the deficient lele genotypes in plants made low in gibberellin content genetically (nana lines) or by paclobutrazol treatment to tall (cv Alaska) and dwarf (cv Progress) peas. Both genotypes responded to GA1 under red irradiation and in darkness. The lele plants grew in response to GA20 and steviol in darkness but showed a much smaller response when red irradiated. The Le plants responded to GA20 and steviol in both light and darkness. The red effects on lele plants were largely reversible by far-red irradiation. It is concluded that the deficiency in 3β-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1 in genotype lele is due to a Pfr-induced blockage in the expression of that activity.  相似文献   

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